Thanks to the madness of San Francisco, I'm looking for a new house to
rent. I'm using Craigslist, of course, looking at pictures of my possible new
homes. And then I go to these houses and, well, the experience is different.
It's not that the pictures were wrong. It's that the pictures are different.
They enjoy a different perspective on the scene. How could it be otherwise? A
camera, not to mention a landlord, sees a house differently than I see
it.
Maurice Merleau-Ponty — I do enjoy
saying his name — says that a house is not a house seen from nowhere but a
house seen from every possible perspective. This is to say, there is no
absolute house, no house outside of it being presented to the world as
something to be seen. This is not to say, however, that the house only comes into
being by being seen but that the house only exists as something that is
seen, that is experienced (by humans or not).
There's a house there. See it? I see it, too. But I see it from here and
you see it from there. We are standing in different positions. We are different
heights. Our views of the house are therefore necessarily different. And this
doesn't even get into how we see, the amalgamation of experiences, ideas,
concepts, memories that make sense of this house as well as houses in general.
And yet we're both looking at that house. Which? That one there. Our
views of the house are not subjective; they don't only exist in our respective
minds and bodies. No, there is a house which we both see. But we see it from
different perspectives, literally.
To say there is no house per se is not to say there is no such thing as
objectivity. It is only to say there is no such thing as a total or absolute
perspective, at least not for any living thing (including humans). There
is still objectivity in that we see that object right there.
The being of a thing is always and already run through with perspectives
both actual and virtual, existant and possible. There never was, is, or will be
a single, unified thing that is that house. The house is lived in, lived
through, by bodies, ideas, bugs, wind, sun, ground. The house is multiple —
food to termites, water to ants, a certain resistance to wind, home to you and
me (and two different homes at that).
Each thing — human and non-human — experiences the house, sees the
house, from its perspective. We all see the house, all experience the house.
But it's not one thing we experience. Or, rather, it may be one thing but it is
one thing that is many things, that is an assemblage (of materials, ideas,
experiences, histories, perspectives).
Of course, my perspective is not limited to my precise physical
perspective. Part of my ability to experience and see the world is to see from
different perspectives. I have seen pictures of houses from all kinds of angles
— including blueprints, which really offer a strange perspective. Blueprints
are like ghosts of a house, its virtuality, its possibility, the house stripped
of nearly all adornment including heat, speed, memory, smell, and touch. And
yet they are a perspective that I see, in a sense, when I see the house
standing right in front of it.
And part of what makes me something that enjoys perspectives is that I
can imagine other perspectives, including yours. After all, I know that we are
all stuff of this world, stuff going with stuff, stuff seeing stuff. (We can
say that the house sees you as you see it only it sees in a very different way
— it creaks, wears, bears weight and activity.) So when I'm standing in front
of the house and can't see the back or the roof, I can be pretty sure that
there is a back and a roof — not because I know there's a house there but
because I know that other things, including me at another time and place, could
see the house from there.
My perspective is not my subjectivity. I may have a subjective
experience seeing that house. It may remind me of a feeling I had in a camp
cabin when I was seven; it may smell to me like my grandmother's closet. But
the house I'm seeing is not strictly speaking subjective. No, that house is an
object (although it has its perspective and subjectivity) that I see, you see,
the wind blows against, the termites eat.
We can say, then, that there is no absolute objectivity just as there is
no absolute subjectivity. I am a thing in the world who has private
experiences, sure, but I am still a thing that exists with other things. Those
things and I go together, forging different kinds of events that more often
than not are aparallel (I may be overwhelmed by the sight of that ocean but the
ocean is barely nudged by my gaze.) But, in any case, we collide, attract,
repel, touch each other (vision is a kind of touch) — we affect and, perhaps,
effect each other.
For Henri Bergson, it's silly to ask whether there
is a true house or if it only exists in my mind. That is a subject-object
dichotomy that is abstract, existing only as an idea for philosophers who ask
silly questions. (He doesn't use the word silly; he says "false.")
It's absurd to ask, Is that house there? Of course that house is
there. Look at the damn thing! And it's equally absurd to then ask: Is the
house there absolutely? Who would ask such a question? Who would answer
such a question? Only philosophers asking false questions, thinking outside of
time, outside of experience, outside of life. (Many philosophers would echo
this sentiment — Wittgenstein, J.L. Austin, and Nietzsche, among others. In
fact, Nietzsche calls those who think outside of life nihilists.)
And so, for Bergson, everything is an image. Or we could say everything
is matter — to Bergson, the two are interchangeable because matter is always
presented to us, to the world, as something to be perceived. It's goofy to ask
whether there is matter absolutely or if we experience the world hermetically,
locked in our subjective senses. I see the house; you see the house. We see the
same house but we see it differently. This doesn't efface the being of the house.
Or, rather, it does efface the being
of the house by putting that being in motion — by transforming it into a becoming.
All things — including human beings and houses — are of this world,
things going with things. We are neither absolute nor removed. We are of the world — multiple, dispersed,
temporal. We are perspectives that are always morphing, lava lamp like.
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