An interpretation of Sartre's phenomenology of the image as a phenomenology of the sign

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Date

2020

Authors

Ahmet Süner

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Philosophy Documentation Center

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Green Open Access

No

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Abstract

Sartre's phenomenology of the image in L'Imaginaire includes analytical distinctions between the mind's comportments towards perceptual objects images and signs which he refers to as different forms of consciousness. Sartre denies any possible convergence between imaging and sign consciousness arguing that there are essential differences in the way they relate to the notions of resemblance positionality and affect. This essay argues against his phenomenological distinctions by stressing the continuity of imaging with sign consciousness: between images and words. In particular it argues that his understanding of the sign as affectless is questionable and that there is no reason to believe that images and signs cannot elicit similar affects or perform the same functions. Consequently it is possible to interpret Sartre's physical images or “analoga” as pictorial signs: his phenomenological descriptions of physical images may indeed be recast in the language of the sign and reformulated as acts of consciousness that involve pictorial signs. © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Affect, Image, Jean Paul Sartre, L'imaginaire, Sign

Fields of Science

06 humanities and the arts, 0603 philosophy, ethics and religion

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Source

Journal of Philosophical Research

Volume

45

Issue

Start Page

231

End Page

247
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