Heidegger’s hermeneutic circle: What is the meaning of art?
In part 2 of this 3 part blog post series, I showed how Martin Heidegger considers things as essential markers of our existential relationship with the world. His way of demonstrating this philosophy is quite unique. I kind of imagine it as a kind of thought-drilling process, spiraling deeper and deeper into the core of the question. At first, I thought his writing was nonsensical, but once you get the pattern, you’ll understand that he is showing us through a hermeneutic process that writing, thinking, and unconcealing are part of the same existential human process. Therefore, his essay, “The Origin of the Work of Art” is not really about art per se, but rather, an exquisite example of the hermeneutic circle in action to understand the meaning of art.
An older version of this post was originally published on an old blog from 2017.
The hermeneutic circle
In “The Origin of the Work of Art” Heidegger asks himself and the reader what is the meaning of art. But Heidegger was not an art critic. He was a philosopher. To make sense of the real purpose of his essay, the reader needs to enter the essay with another inquiry: that is, what is truth?
Heidegger’s inquisition is epistemological and existential: How do we find answers from our questions? How do our questions and answers bring us more clarity about our relationship with the world? Through the use of the hermeneutic circle, Heidegger shows us that before seeking answers to solve a riddle, we need to see the riddle for what it is and then ask the right questions.
What is art? Not just the piece of artwork but what is the essence of art?
Art is entangled with work. But we only know what this work entails by looking at the artwork.
This question is like asking, what came first, the chicken or the egg? Can we ever get to the answer? Conventional logic wants straightforward answers so that the circle is avoided. But how about asking, what is a chicken or what is an egg? How can we get to the answer without the work of asking the questions and thinking about the truth behind our questions?
So let’s start from a thing’s essence. If there is a “thingly-ness” to created work, what is the “thingy-ness” of art?
A thing is more than its traits or its properties. A thing is a connection or an assemblage of other things or entities.
First, things appeal to the senses. They have form.
Second, things are created through the process of work. Or you could say, work is the reproduction of a thing’s essence. So how does the work in art reproduce the essence of art?
Some sort of truth is put into the work process of creating art. But before finding what this truth is we need to know what is truth.
All essences relate to the truth of existence. For example, we can only understand the essence of work (i.e., “workly-ness”), the essence of equipment (i.e., “equipmental-ness”), or the essence to a thing (i.e., “thingly-ness”), when we consider the essence of being (i.e., Being or Dasein).
Therefore, art is setting up the truth of Being ( i.e. the essence of being or existence) to be expressed through the artist’s work.
Truth is a deconcealing. Truth is finding ourselves in a clearing.
Therefore, art is the deconcealing of truth. Through work, art unconceals the essential truth of Being (i.e., being in the world). This essence can also be called poetry.
So the question is not about art but what art is.
Perhaps solving problems isn’t about getting answers.
Perhaps, what we need is to see the truth of the problem by asking the right questions.
References:
Heidegger, Martin. 1971. Poetry, Language, Thought. Trans. by Albert Hofstadter. New York: Harper Perennial.
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