In the encounter with the mystery of nature the ‘Glider’ more than the steering ‘Pilot’ lets himself be lead by wonder through the tides and flows of breeze and airstreams. Thinking likewise, gliding seeks by its very nature, asks for, and even insists on dwelling in Being whilst breathing (grasping) its enigmatic and inscrutable essence. There is no salvation to the human spirit in calculative thought, as long as it avoids being absorbed by an inner urge inebriated by the wonder of gliding. There is no promise of salvation in scientific thought as long it lacks the gift of poetic inspiration.
Ariella Atzmon, ‘Teaching as a Work of Art’ ([4], p. 110)
Abstract
This article reflects on the received view of the rupture which constitutes the beginning of a critical, ethical, political and legal opening, the understanding of which inhabits the cry of, and response to, injustice. It takes the very critique that feeds into, and is distorted by, practical reasoning, as its point of departure. Grasping this rupture as the complementary relation between deconstruction and radical alterity, would entail unreflectively accepting a certain kind of truthfulness—truthfulness as [in]correctness, manifesting in a relationship that involves rootless and controlling movement of making and unmaking of world. In closely reading Wittgenstein and Heidegger on the level of seeing, showing and saying, truthfulness is shown to contain an essential tension between, on the one hand, the Socratic, metaphysically-bound notion of beingness, correctness and meaning-steering and, on the other hand, the pre-Socratic notion of unconcealment (a-lethia), which, pointing even earlier than pre-Socratics into aboriginality, involves attentive letting of gliding in the inexpressible saying of language. While steering is about generating new possibilities of expressibility, gliding is about poetic dwelling, or enduring inexpressibility as a constitutive part of saying. Although aletheia is taken to be the key influence on rootless post-foundational thinking, it is argued that unconcealment involves letting and enduring the presencing inexpressibility of place and home-coming, that is, worlding-rootedness; thus showing Heidegger’s originary politics as the district of the uncanny to be about worlding that attentively lets the presencing inexpressibility of earth be as place. In reading Heidegger’s views on humanism, beginning and language, the argument links inexpressibility—essentially and historically—to the grasping of the belongingness together of world, earth and place, viewing this belongingness as key to both the saying of art and of mortals dwelling together temporally, spatially, materially in a manner always strange to, and nearer than, the steering/controlling of beingness, time, space and place that the very gesture and emergence of critique is captive of and is not capable of attuning to and capturing. Art always estranges the metaphysical cycle of correctness which preserves pain and suffering—a cycle that inhabits a double bind of responding to violence and injustice generated by the violence of metaphysics with metaphysical violence and justice. In showing essential strife within truthfulness itself, Heidegger points to even greater and earlier problematic than the pre-Socratics—to the painful core of inexpressibility between the ontology of steering time, spaces and material—steering places—and the gliding temporality, spatiality and materiality of ontology of place.
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Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Keren Ben-Dor, Jacques de Ville, David Owen, Ariella Atzmon, Peter Goodrich, Louis Wolcher, Alun Gibbs, Erzsebet Strauzs, Andreas Philopopulos-Mihalopoulos, Emma Laurie, Alexandros Ntovas, Nathan Gibbs, Ewa Placzek-Neves and last but not least, the two referees who offered comments which proved crucial for a much fuller elucidation of the argument.
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Ben-Dor, O. The Gravity of Steering, the Grace of Gliding and the Primordiality of Presencing Place: Reflections on Truthfulness, Worlding, Seeing, Saying and Showing in Practical Reasoning and Law. Int J Semiot Law 26, 341–390 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11196-012-9273-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11196-012-9273-x