Henry Somers-Hall
Manchester Metropolitan University
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Research in Phenomenology | 2017
Henry Somers-Hall
The aim of this paper is to demonstrate the importance of Henri Bergson to the philosophical development of Jean-Paul Sartre’s thought. Despite Sartre’s early enthusiasm for Bergson’s description of consciousness, and the frequent references to Bergson in Sartre’s early work, there has been virtually no analysis of the influence of Bergson’s thought on Sartre’s development. This paper addresses this deficit. The first part of the paper explores Sartre’s analysis of the function of the imagination in his two early works on the subject, The Imagination , and The Imaginary . I argue that many of Sartre’s central criticisms of what he calls “the illusion of immanence” can be traced back to Bergson, and that, despite Sartre’s rejection of Bergson’s account of consciousness, Sartre’s account of the imagination is still heavily indebted to Bergson’s logic of multiplicities. The second part argues that Sartre’s analysis of the imagination leads, in Being and Nothingness , to an account of freedom that still bears traces of his early Bergsonism, even if it reverses the direction of Bergson’s own analysis of freedom.
Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology | 2016
Henry Somers-Hall
Abstract Deleuze’s philosophy of painting can be seen to pose certain challenges to a phenomenological approach to philosophy. While a phenomenological response to Deleuze’s philosophy is clearly needed, I show in this article how an approach taken in a recent paper by Christian Lotz proves inadequate. Lotz argues that through Deleuze’s refusal to accept the place of representation in art, he is unable to distinguish art from decoration, or to give a coherent account of how the (non-representational) content of art can be represented. I show that this criticism emerges from a misreading of the place of representation in Deleuze’s philosophy. I will argue that by failing to take account of some of the key features of Deleuze’s wider ontology, such as the importance of both the virtual and the actual for his analysis of objects, Lotz’s critique proves unsuccessful. In particular, I want to show that Lotz’s criticisms rest on a failure to attend to the systematic nature of Deleuze’s philosophy, and in particular, the place of Deleuze’s analysis of Bacon within the system as a whole. I will further show that Lotz’s phenomenological defence commits the fallacy of petitio principii, assuming the validity of the phenomenological method in order to justify the phenomenological approach.
Archive | 2012
Henry Somers-Hall
Archive | 2012
Daniel W. Smith; Henry Somers-Hall
Archive | 2012
John Protevi; Daniel W. Smith; Henry Somers-Hall
Archive | 2012
Paul Patton; Daniel W. Smith; Henry Somers-Hall
Archive | 2012
Miguel de Beistegui; Daniel W. Smith; Henry Somers-Hall
Archive | 2012
Leonard Lawlor; Daniel W. Smith; Henry Somers-Hall
Archive | 2012
Manuel DeLanda; Daniel W. Smith; Henry Somers-Hall
Archive | 2012
James S. Williams; Daniel W. Smith; Henry Somers-Hall