Supernormalising Nothing from the Hyperbolic Nihil to the Ordinary Supernothing

Author:

Ó Maoilearca John12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Critical and Historical Studies, Kingston University , London , United Kingdom

2. Center for Contemporary European Philosophy, Radboud University , Nijmegen , Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract This essay connects the mystical concept of “supernothing” with Bergson’s notion of the image of nothingness as a movement in the making. I do this also with respect to the film The Empty Man (David Prior, 2020) – which explicitly cites Gorgias’s four-part embargo on nothing (it exists, it cannot be known, communicated, or understood): nothingness is re-rendered as movement, in particular, the transmission and reception of images in the brain. Indeed, this is precisely Bergson’s theory of the brain too – as the receiver and transmitter of images, a communication of movements. This “nihilistic” approach to the brain (it does not store images, it has no positive content) is not a valorisation of the ego as void à la Metzinger, but the real, processual rethinking of what nothingness and nihilism might mean – with a full, moving “supernothing” at its heart. Though there is a mystical and a film-philosophical account referenced in this renewal of nothingness, it will not lead to any exotic or hyperbolic excess (the brain as supernatural agent), but rather a very “ordinary” account that we will describe in terms of “supernormalisation”: an “unlearning” or mundanising of the supernatural: an extraction of the supernatural by natural means.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Philosophy

Reference12 articles.

1. Bergson, Henri. Creative Evolution, trans. Arthur Mitchell: Macmillan, 1911.

2. Bergson, Henri. Matter and Memory, trans by Nancy Margaret Paul and W. Scott Palmer. New York: Zone Books, 1990.

3. Bergson, Mina/Moina Mathers. “Of Skrying and Travelling in the Spirit-Vision.” In Israel Regardie, The Golden Dawn: The Original Account of the Teachings, Rites, and Ceremonies of the Hermetic Order, edited by John Michael Greer. Minnesota: Llewellyn Publications, 2016, Epub edition.

4. Godwin, Joscelyn. “Esoteric Theories of Color.” In Lux in Tenebris: The Visual and the Symbolic in Western Esotericism, edited by Peter J. Forshaw, 447–76. Leiden: Brill, 2017.

5. Butler, Alison. Victorian Occultism and the Making of Modern Magic: Invoking Tradition. London: Palgrave, 2011.

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