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Erman Kaplama explores the principle of transition (UEbergang) from
metaphysics to physics developed by Kant in his unfinished magnum
opus, Opus Postumum. Drawing on the Heraclitean logos and Kant's
notions of sense-intuition (Anschauung) and reflective judgment,
Kaplama interprets transition as an aesthetic principle. He revises
the idea of nature (phusis) as the principle of motion referring to
Heraclitus' cosmology as well as Heidegger's and Nietzsche's
lectures on the pre-Socratics. Kaplama compares the Kantian sublime
and Nietzschean Dionysian as aesthetic theories representing the
transition from the sensible to supersensible and as cosmological
theories that consider human nature (ethos) as an extension of
nature. In light of such Nietzschean notions as the eternal
recurrence and will to power, the Dionysian is shown to trigger the
transition by which nature and art are redefined. Finally,
Cosmological Aesthetics employs the principles of transition and
motion to analyze Van Gogh's Starry Night in an excursus.
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