The Conception of Line in Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty

Philosophy Today 32 (4):327-337 (1988)
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Abstract

This article's purpose is to show how heidegger and merleau-Ponty re-Visioned aesthetic linearity and to relate this re-Visioning through the lines of language to generations of newly-Significant 'lines of thought'. By delineating their different senses and functions, I distinguish (what I refer to as) "in-Lines" from outlines, Establishing that the former is a primary mode and arguing that the latter's limited and restrictive connotations fails to appreciate the 'opening' of creative significance apparent in the phenomenon of linearity. From these considerations, I also construct a defense of heidegger's thesis that the nature of art is, Broadly speaking, Language itself

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Suzanne Cataldi
Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville

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