Rhythm as a Logic of the Sensible World

Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 11 (1):11-27 (2024)
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Abstract

One of the aims of phenomenology was to uncover a logic of the sensible world. This essay shows how rhythm can be understood as a logic of the sensible world and how rhythm is not only a profoundly aesthetic experience but one integral to phenomenological reflection. The essay highlights how aesthetic experiences accomplish phenomenological reductions and how phenomenological reflection demands a continued inquiry into the ways intelligibility first opens from within the sensible world. Rhythm is shown to be a preverbal logic and expressive power that takes place between sensing and the sensible. The essay explores how art and phenomenology draw upon rhythms to bring forth senses of experience that normally get passed over and escape conceptual determination. The investigation digs beneath predicated experience and propositional language to reveal how rhythm is a preverbal mode of inquiry that takes place between solicitations made by the sensible and the body’s sensitive responsiveness. Rhythm establishes an original synchronic relation to sensible things that allows nascent forms of intelligibility to come into a dynamic and living clarity. However, rhythms comprise a latent form of intentionality that precedes the act-object schema of intentionality. As a form of intentionality rooted in the senses, rhythm is shown to be a mode of transport that effectuates absorptive experiences which pose unique challenges for phenomenological reflection and aesthetic theory. Nonetheless, rhythm helps clarify one way in which sources of intelligibility not only grow out of the sensible world but retain an enduring aesthetic quality.

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John Montani
State University of New York, Stony Brook

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Art as Experience. [REVIEW]I. E. - 1934 - Journal of Philosophy 31 (10):275-276.
The World of the Living Present and the Constitution of the Surrounding World External to the Organism.Edmund Husserl - 1981 - In Peter McCormick & Frederick A. Elliston (eds.), Husserl, Shorter Works. University of Notre Dame Press. pp. 238-250.

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