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The essays in this book respond to Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka's recent
call to explore the relationship between the evolution of the
universe and the process of self-individuation in the ontopoietic
unfolding of life. The essays approach the sensory manifold in a
number of ways. They show that theories of modern science become a
strategy for the phenomenological study of works of art, and vice
versa. Works of phenomenology and of the arts examine how
individual spontaneity connects with the design(s) of the logos -
of the whole and of the particulars - while the design(s) rest not
on some human concept, but on life itself. Life's pliable matrices
allow us to consider the expansiveness of contemporary science, and
to help create a contemporary phenomenological sense of cosmos.
Although the creative impulse surges in revolt against everyday
reality, breaking through its confines, it makes pacts with that
reality's essential laws and returns to it to modulate its sense.
In fact, it is through praxis that imagination and artistic
inventiveness transmute the vital concerns of life, giving them
human measure. But at the same time art's inspiration imbues life
with aesthetic sense, which lifts human experience to the
spiritual. Within these two perspectives art launches messages of
specifically human inner propulsions, strivings, ideals, nostalgia,
yearnings prosaic and poetic, profane and sacral, practical and
ideal, while standing at the fragile borderline of everydayness and
imaginative adventure. Art's creative perduring constructs are
intentional marks of the aesthetic significance attributed to the
flux of human life and reflect the human quest for repose. They
mediate communication and participation in spirit and sustain the
relative continuity of culture and history.
The essays in this book respond to Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka's recent
call to explore the relationship between the evolution of the
universe and the process of self-individuation in the ontopoietic
unfolding of life. The essays approach the sensory manifold in a
number of ways. They show that theories of modern science become a
strategy for the phenomenological study of works of art, and vice
versa. Works of phenomenology and of the arts examine how
individual spontaneity connects with the design(s) of the logos -
of the whole and of the particulars - while the design(s) rest not
on some human concept, but on life itself. Life's pliable matrices
allow us to consider the expansiveness of contemporary science, and
to help create a contemporary phenomenological sense of cosmos.
Although the creative impulse surges in revolt against everyday
reality, breaking through its confines, it makes pacts with that
reality's essential laws and returns to it to modulate its sense.
In fact, it is through praxis that imagination and artistic
inventiveness transmute the vital concerns of life, giving them
human measure. But at the same time art's inspiration imbues life
with aesthetic sense, which lifts human experience to the
spiritual. Within these two perspectives art launches messages of
specifically human inner propulsions, strivings, ideals, nostalgia,
yearnings prosaic and poetic, profane and sacral, practical and
ideal, while standing at the fragile borderline of everydayness and
imaginative adventure. Art's creative perduring constructs are
intentional marks of the aesthetic significance attributed to the
flux of human life and reflect the human quest for repose. They
mediate communication and participation in spirit and sustain the
relative continuity of culture and history.
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