OPM 132
Day 5 on Mt. Desert Island, , Pine Cone Cabin, Hodgon Pond
The first sentence from the meditation OPM 132
raises the question I was beginning to raise yesterday in my commentary
reflection: “If, as Aristotle say, ‘it is a sign of the man who knows and of
the man who does not know, that the former can teach, for artists can teach,
and men of mere experience cannot,’ then where are we to situate the Sage who
take direction from the Tao, and welcomes the ineffable and the gap that
preserves plurality by sheltering the possibility appearing in the ‘not
yet’? If the Sage is the one who takes
up residence ‘next to’ Being, becoming the neighbor of openness itself, then
how are we to identify [him] within Aristotle’s lexicon?”
Aside from this opening sentence representing the
kind of layered and referential writing that is so characteristic of these
meditations, the question is one that prompts a whole series of philosophical
questions, most of them revolving around the figure of the ‘artist teacher’
(technician, instructor) depicted by Aristotle, and the figure of the ‘learning
leader’ denoted by Heidegger as the one who ‘lets nothing else but learning be
learned,’ and ‘has far more to learn than the learner because he has to learn
how to let them learn,’ and so is on far less stable ground than they are.
I’m truly prompted by the question raised at the beginning of OPM 132, especially after
the experience I had today when we were biking on the carriage road around
Eagle Lake. Just after the half way
point we encountered a very old mountain stream that ran down from Cadillac
Mountain. The stream has a primeval
quality to it. Indeed, I’ve never before
in all my years of hiking in forests encountered a stream with such a
consistent pattern of moss covered rocks that are themselves of such a common
shape and size. Here are some pictures.
I’m
normally drawn by the sound of the stream’s movement, which is unlike any sound
when you experience in the space of a thick forest away from the sounds of
machines, or other human made objects.
In this particular spot, the bubbling of the brook was complemented by
the songs of birds echoing in the forest.
“This is a place for meditation!” I declared to Kelly. I sat for a photo, but also, I’d hoped, to
be taken in and taken away by this place.
Unfortunately, I was, on the contrary, taken away from the spot by
Jaime, who, at that moment, woke from his nap in the Hurley carriage, insisting
that we move along (so he could resume his
‘meditation’!) I share this story
because as we got underway I couldn’t help but drift off into reflection, and
into the very question that I’m taking up this evening as I reflect on the
‘status’ of the Sage’s ‘knowledge’: How
did I ‘know’ that was a place of meditation?
Was it from year’s of experience in thinking about meditation, and knowing well the iconography of the practice
(the artwork, the gardens, etc., that
both inspire and organize meditation thinking)?
Or was there something there
that called my attention, that drew me in and invited me to sit, listen and
look with reverence?
What Aristotle calls the ‘man of experience’ might
also be the one who has experiences,
who is experienced, which is to say,
is able to experience the presencing of unique places. This person ‘knows’ how to receive what is
being offered, and also knows how not to ask for more than what is being
offered. He is person of humility, and
gratitude. Aristotle’s ‘artist’ strikes
me as one who does not simply take in what he is experiencing. Rather, he breaks it down into discrete parts. He also seems to lack a sense of history, or
feeling for temporality. Shifting the
metaphor, if the person of experience is one who is humble and grateful for
what is being offered, this one who Aristotle claims ‘can teach’ is also one
who doesn’t simply thank the host for the fine meal she has made and offered
him, but has the audacity to ask for the recipe!
3.0 - (Tuesday, Portland, ME) - Kelly and I celebrate our 13th wedding anniversary today, and as we sit on our patio we are welcomed by a perfect June morning in Maine! Breezy, clear, cool, no humidity. Feels like our marriage on the best of days! ;-).
ReplyDeleteSeems like OPM 132 and the 2.0 commentary are struggling to "fit" Aristotle's artist into the discourse of the project. Or because he doesn't seem to fit, dismiss him. That's neither generous nor phenomenological, and appears to belie the process of the daily meditation. The project took on a life of its own, and became an epic tale of the Sage. The rule of "picking up where I left off the day before" had the unintentional consequence of producing an epic narrative. I wonder what I would have produced if I had put less pressure on the project and just committed to writing each day? There was definitely mounting pressure as the year unfolded, and though I have made a commitment in 3.0 to devote less time and have lowered the expectations, I still have morning when I feel a sense of pressure.
All that to say, today I'm less inclined to narrow the scope of the sage, although I am still committed, at the theoretical level, to the Heideggerian and Taoist teacher who is focused on letting learning be learned, who is evoking learning and not transmitting knowledge. That's the contrast with Aristotle's artist, who is a technician and master craftsman. The artist knows something, and knows it well, and wants to teach others. He directs, while the Sage teaches by indirection. I'm focusing on this exact issue in my current project with the category of relational autonomy. The philosophical educator cannot instruct a student in autonomy. That would undermine knowledge of the principle. To understand the principle is to encounter it, and thus to experience it. And I am contending that this principle is encountered in the object of study, with the autonomy of the book. Thinking about this I wonder if I need to take up object oriented ontology. But I've just had a quick glance, and despite telling myself recently, "You're on sabbatical...take the time to read new things and enjoy the process," I also don't want to get pulled down a rabbit hole, which has happend in two of the last sabbaticals: the last time with my old friend Aristotle, and before that with my old friend Arendt. This time I'm working from what I am most familiar with, and writing for my students!