Nature's Sublime: An Essay in Aesthetic Naturalism

Nature's Sublime: An Essay in Aesthetic Naturalism

by Robert S. Corrington
Nature's Sublime: An Essay in Aesthetic Naturalism

Nature's Sublime: An Essay in Aesthetic Naturalism

by Robert S. Corrington

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Overview

Nature’s Sublime uses a radical new form of phenomenology to probe into the deepest traits of the human process in its individual, social, religious, and aesthetic dimensions. Starting with the selving process the essay describes the role of signs and symbols in intra and interpersonal communication. At the heart of the human use of signs is a creative tension between religions symbols and the novel symbols created in the various arts. A contrast is made between natural communities, which flatten out and reject novel forms of semiosis, and communities of interpretation, which welcomes creative and enriched signs and symbols. The normative claim is made that religious sign/symbol systems have a tendency toward tribalism and violence, while the various spheres of the aesthetic are comparatively non-tribal, or even deliberatively anti-tribal. The concept/experience of beauty and the sublime is meant to replace that of religious revelation. The sublime is not merely an internal mode of attunement, contra Kant, but comes from the very depths of nature in the potencies of nature naturing.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498510882
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 02/26/2015
Pages: 230
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Robert S. Corrington is professor of philosophical theology in the graduate division of religion at Drew University, Madison, NJ. He has published nine previous books as an ongoing project of creating and expanding the philosophical and theological perspective of his ecstatic naturalism. From the beginning his work has been concerned with bringing classical American philosophy into dialogue with Continental thought. As important is his commitment to Post-Freudian psychoanalysis and its correlation to semiotics and metaphysics. He has served on the Boards of the Semiotic Society of America and the Highlands Institute and as president of the Karl Jaspers Society of North America.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction Chapter 1: Selving Chapter 2: Communal Variations Chapter 3: God-ing and Involution Chapter 4: Genius, Art, and the Sublime

What People are Saying About This

Donald A. Crosby

Robert Corrington continues to refine, develop, and clarify his vision of religious—or what he now prefers to call aesthetic—naturalism. The book’s broad scope includes, among other things, presentation of an ordinal phenomenological metaphysics that contrasts with the phenomenologies of Husserl and Heidegger; analysis of closed and open types of semiotic communities and their respective stultifying and beneficent social effects; description of intrusions of the spirit that supplement the results of biological evolution and stem from the unconscious of nature upwelling into the human unconscious; and defense of the bold thesis that religion can become deeply ethical only when it surpasses itself and becomes sublated into the domain of aesthetic experience, creation, and life—especially to the extent that the aesthetic opens the way to the awesomely disturbing but also healing powers of the sublime. The richly innovative, provocative, and debatable character of Corrington’s claims and arguments in relation to these and other topics will stimulate lively thought and discussion.

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