Back in
Portland after a two-week stint down in NJ/Long Island to open the academic
year 2014-15. Often lonely, but awfully
productive, the transition from the consciousness of summer was made. The cooler early autumn air has greeted my
return, so that no traces of summer remain.
Only the memories of the time spent in the forests, mountains, and on
water, both fresh and salt.
The
writing this day continues the meditation under the banner of close
listening. And I was tempted to raise
Augustine’s question about memory and ask about the sound of memories, and
about the form of listening happening with memory. How is it that we hear sounds, voices,
music? Perhaps remembering is a kind of
listening, and recollection happens when we hear the past? But that would reduce memory to a sonic
event, which doesn’t seem to work. So
I’d limit myself only to the recollection of sounds, voices, music, even
noises, and wonder about the hearing that happens when we remember them. Of course, hearing sounds from the past, and
listening to them are not the same.
Listening is the preferred term because it carries with it the quality
of interpretation, of understanding, of perception. If hearing is the unmediated reception of
sound, listening is the intentional direction of hearing that anticipates the
reception of meaningful sound. We hear
the sounds of instruments and voices, but we listen for harmony, melody, and
rhythm. Even the expression “listen to music” is
slightly off target. Better said that we
“listen for music”. Listening is
hearing with intentionality. It is
directed hearing; purposive hearing; but not instrumental hearing. And this is why listening is the fundamental
or primary activity for thinking:
listening is anticipatory and preparatory because it gathers us into a
modality of perception. (Latin perceptio(n-),
from the verb percipere ‘seize, understand’).
If perception is a modality of being seized by a phenomenon, this state
of captivity is anticipated and prepared by listening.
The
meditation from this day begins with a fragment from Heidegger that is probably
one of the project’s top ten: ‘What we can do in our present case,’ Heidegger
says, ‘or anyway can learn, is to listen closely.’ This is from the first lecture in What is Called Thinking?
The
fragment reveals the listening as primary, as originary, and is meant to begin
from the place where the meditation from previous day ended: with the
identification of Zarathustra as the one who “gets learning underway by
enjoining others in close listening.’
Heidegger tells his students, at the beginning, that they can learn to
listen closely, because they are not yet thinking. Most
thought provoking is that we are not yet thinking, he tells them. And in the absence of thinking they can learn
to listen closely. It really isn’t a option,
but a necessity: they have to learn to
listen closely because they are not
yet thinking. The absence of thinking
demands the learning of close thinking.
Learning to listen closely is a preparation for thinking, or so it
seems. But how can they learn to listen
closely? This is the ‘educational’
question that calls for an experiment in teaching. And Zarathustra is a model – a theoretical
model – for an instructional experiment in music-making philosophy, which I
spent most of last academic year articulating. [The writing of this in 2004
anticipated much of what I wrote last academic year: “To ‘know’ the truth of
Being, then, is to be a devoted learner, or one who is devoted to the artistry of the poetic, to the freedom
of creating together with others, to a
dialogue identified in the improvisational give-and-take.”(9/20/04)] Zarathustra’s speech making gets learning
underway by enjoining others in close listening…he speaks, evocatively,
provocatively, in a way that seizes our attention…we learn to listen closely.
Why are
captivated and seized into listening?
First, ‘learning’ to listen closely implies that before we are listening
in an anticipatory way, we experience a pre-intentional
listening. With this experience we might
identify a threshold between the unmediated hearing and intentional
listening. Pre-intentional listening
happens when our perception is seized.
This happens when we encounter what I call the evocative, or the sounds
that call out to us: vocare, the
voice that calls us. And like the
telephone call that arrives as an interruption…the phone rings!!...the
evocative seizes our attention because it offers something ‘new’, or what I
call the “not yet”: “this whole dialogic
project depends on painstaking listening that hears the excess of Being, the gift of the ‘not yet’…All learning
depends on the reception of the ‘not yet’ that appears for the first time with the evocative speaking of…the ‘excess’ of
the ‘not yet’ spoken.”
What I
would emphasize today, on this day when I revisit the meditation from this day
in 2004, is the ongoing learning of close listening. And this would imply a reticence, yes, the
reticent of silence, a silence about the intentionality of listening. A listening that prepares us for thinking, is
always already preceded by a listening that is being learned. Perhaps these are two sides of the same
coin, the very same event of learning, so that when Heidegger says, ‘at present
we can learn to listen closely,’ we can hear him as saying, ‘at present we can learn
to prepare for thinking.’ This is why
today’s meditation moves towards a conclusion with the following claims: “Listening…is
the a priori condition for the actuality
of poetic dwelling. Listening is the readiness that receives the evocative,
the openness that is ready to take the risk of welcoming, the risk of hearing
the other who saying will effect a change, whose arrival will create a
transformation….To learn to listen more closely is to become ready for the one
who goes under and bears the disquiet of questioning.”
See http://duartebeinglearningsentences.blogspot.com/ post 3.1.15 Originary Thinking:
ReplyDeleteFeaturing the Sentence:
3.1.15.a Nοῦς (intuition) is the faculty of originary thinking.
3.0 (Friday, Portland, ME) Two weeks in NJ/NY...the transition from summer!?!?! Ok, I read that and it's reinforcing my doubts about the choices I made with respect to commuting from Maine to Hofstra. Jaime was only 4 years old. It must have seemed to him that I was gone for a month or longer. I carry the classic parental guilt that I wasn't around enough for him when he was younger. That and my impatience. It might be my age, and the fact that he's the last of the kids, and what's more that he's a teenager and seems content to be left alone, but I'm not convinced of any of that, actually. I miss him and want to hang out with him. We used to go to the Evo climbing gym, ski together, bike rides, not to mention the family movie nights, etc. When kids stop being kids and become young adults the transition isn't easy for us parents. Yes, we want them to be independent and to thrive on their own. But we also want to feel connected with them, somehow involved in their life. Two weeks away! I can really feel that now that I'm on sabbatical. You can't go back in time, but you can certainly try to avoid repeating what now seems to be misguided decisions. So I'm going to focus on making the most of my time here at home, and glad I didn't follow through on going to the University of Warsaw! The midweek retreat to Bar Harbor was enough.
ReplyDeleteAs for the thinking/writing from this day 20/10 years ago, its resonates on this day, for sure, as I made revisions to the first draft of "LEARN." What I describe above as close listening is now folded into what I am calling phenomenological reading. Here's how put it today in the revised part 1: "Study is underway when a student is inspired to dwell with that text. Such dwelling happens through a mindful receptivity of the text that I will describe as phenomenological reading," "When the student accepts the invitation to take up phenomenological reading they enter into that existential location where the significant object resides and waits to be picked up and read: the solitude of study," "With philosophical learning “truth” is a matter of authenticity, of originality. This is why the enduring significance of the work of art is an exemplar of the object of study. The path of philosophical learning is a path that takes us through the place of study where we encounter that which appears to “shine forth” (phainesthai) with enduring meaning. Phenomenological reading is the receptivity of the text as the ekphanestaton - beautiful because it is original, authentic, and, from the perspective of the well-beaten path, extra-ordinary."