MODERN TIMES were built upon science and there is no science but that of the general. But since exclusion of the particular is destruction of the concrete, modern times were built up through philosophical annihilation of the body. And if the Platonists excluded it for religious and metaphysical reasons, science did so for coldly gnoseological ones.
Among other catastrophes for man, this proscription exacerbated his loneliness. Because that gnoseological pro- scription of the emotions and passions, the sole acceptance of universal and objective reason, transformed man into thing, and things do not communicate — the nation with the most extensive electronic communications is also the one in which human beings are loneliest.
Language (of life, not mathematics), like the other living languages, (art, love, and friendship) is the ego’s effort to reach out from its island to overcome its loneliness. And those attempts are possible from subject to subject not via abstract symbols of science but through the concrete symbols of art, through myth and fantasy — concrete universals. And the dialectic of existence operates in such a way that the deeper we plumb our own subjectivity the closer we come to others.
We do not mean to say that modern times would have ignored the body, but that they lessened its cognitive capacity. They had expelled it from the realm of pure objectivity without noticing that in so doing they were reifying man himself since the body is the concrete support of his personality. This civilization, which is divisive, has separated everything from everything; the soul from the body as well. With terrible consequences. Consider love.
The other’s body is an object and as long as contact is made with the body alone there is nothing but a kind of onanism. Only through the relation of an integrated body and soul can the ego emerge from itself, transcending its loneliness and achieving communion. For that reason, pure sex is sad, since it leaves us in the initial loneliness with the aggravating circumstance of the disappointed attempt.
And it explains how love, although one of the central themes of all literatures, has in our time taken on a tragic perspective and a metaphysical dimension it did not have before: it has nothing to do with the courtly love of the epoch of chivalry, nor the worldly love of the eighteenth century.
The redemption of the body through existential philosophies meant a re-evaluation of the psychological and the literary beyond the merely conceptual. Only the novel, then, can integrally encompass pure thought, feelings and passions, dream and myth. In other words, an authentic anthropology (metaphysical and metalogical) can be achieved only by the novel, as long, of course, as we broaden the genre without the guilt feelings that arise from literary sophistries or mistaken servitude to the spirit of science.
The pre-eminence Nietzsche gave life has already been mentioned. The anthropocentric revolution of our time is synthesized in that election. That center will no longer be the object nor the transcendental subject but the concrete person, with a new awareness of the body that sustains it.
Nietzsche’s vitalism culminates in existential phenomenology because it overcomes mere biologism without renouncing the concrete integrity of the human being. To Heidegger, in fact, to be a man is to be in the world and that is possible because of the body; it is the body that individualizes us, that gives us a view of the world from the “I and here.” No longer the impartial and ubiquitous observer of science or objectivist literature, but the concrete I, incarnate in a body, In the body that transforms me into “a being for death.” Thus, the metaphysical importance of the body.
This concreteness of the new philosophy was always characteristic of literature which never left off being anthropocentric although many of its theoreticians paradoxically wanted it to. This concreteness restored man’s authentic tragic condition. Existence is tragic because of its radical duality, because of belonging at the same time to the realm of nature and to the realm of the spirit. As body, we are nature and, consequently, mortal and relative; as spirit, we share in the absolute and eternal. The soul drawn upwards by our anxiety for eternity and condemned to death by its incarnation seems to be the true representative of the human condition and the true seat of our unhappiness. We could be happy as animal or pure spirit, but not as human being.
Klages asserts, after Nietzsche in part, and correctly, that the spirit (Gevst), the expression of the rational and transcendental in man, disturbs and even destroys the creative life of the soul (See/e) which is irreducible to the rational, to the impersonal and objective which is particular to the spirit. The soul is a force found in intimate connection with living nature, creator of symbols and myths, capable of interpreting enigmas that confront man and which the spirit, can at most, only exorcize.
This destruction of the world of myth by the spirit through the mechanical action of concepts is depersonalization and death. The spirit judges while the soul lives.
And the soul is man’s only power capable of resolving the conflicts and antinomies that the spirit spreads like a net overflowing reality. Only symbols invented by the soul, not the dry concepts of science, make it possible to arrive at man’s ultimate truth. Only the soul can express the flow of the living, the real-nonrational.
Thus, the gnoseological transcendency of the novel.
For the novel is a product of soul, not pure spirit.
Ernesto Sabato
The Writter In the Carastrofe of Our Time