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Alessandro De Cesaris | The Taste of Truth
2.2 Beyond objectuality
In his Lectures on Aesthetics, Hegel famously remarks how the proper me-
dium for the appreciation of the fine arts are sight and hearing, the two
«theoretical senses» (Hegel 1988, 38). While sight and hearing require a
distance from the object, taste is immediately sensuous. I would like to
point out the profoundly tautological character of Hegel’s remark. Sight
is the most “theoretical” of the senses precisely because we are used to a
visiocentric understanding of thought itself (even the term “theoretical”
comes from the Greek theaomai, “to watch”). If we start from this implicit
understanding of the nature of rationality, Hegel’s remark is not only true,
but circular. The proper question to be asked, therefore, is the following:
what is it like to understand rationality and thought starting from the sense
of taste, rather than from vision?
Before answering this question – something which I will do in the section
dedicated to taste as a symbolic form – let us analyse the physiological fea-
tures of taste as such. First of all, the most peculiar and unique feature of
taste is that it consummates its object. In the process of tasting the object
is literally transformed into the subject. Secondly, already Aristotle high-
lights (cf. 2016, 43) how the physiology of taste requires the mixture of
object and moisture. In other words, there is no taste without mixture of
subject and object.
These two aspects tell us that, unlike vision, the physiology of taste – and
subsequently its aesthetics – is structurally based on the overcoming of the
separation of subject and object.
2.3 A Metaphysics of Nutrition
This intuition leads us to a remarkable discovery: we live in a world made
up of individual objects only if we interpret the world starting from vision.
Taste, however, is the clear negation of this standpoint: the ontology of
taste refuses any clear separation between living things, or between liv-
ing and non-living things. As Emanuele Coccia points out, «nutrition is the
evidence of the impossibility to consider the form that informs each living
being – in its individual and specific identity – as something substantial,
There is no taste without
mixture of subject and object.
Limina
Grazer theologische Perspektiven, Band 4:2
- Titel
- Limina
- Untertitel
- Grazer theologische Perspektiven
- Band
- 4:2
- Herausgeber
- Karl Franzens University Graz
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.4 x 30.1 cm
- Seiten
- 214
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften LIMINA - Grazer theologische Perspektiven