What happens to intentionality in the thought of Jacques Derrida? When
he is finished--when the terminological chain of differance has been
finely interwoven with and marked off from that of "presence"--what
has been made of that common state of affairs in which an "act" of
consciousness and/or language `selects' its object? What then are its
components to be, and how are they related? For example, when I recall the first
automobile I owned, or plan what I will work on during my next sabbatical leave,
or savor the colors in a sunset sky? How does Derrida analyze that peculiar type
of affinity between particular events of consciousness and specifically
correlated events (of the various possible types) which we often express by the
prepositions "of" and "about"? What is the basic nature,
according to him, of that ofness or aboutness which is
characteristic of acts of consciousness? Especially, how does differance
enter into it?
The fabled king Midas of Phrygia turned everything he touched, including his
food, into gold. There is a long-standing tradition in Western thought according
to which whatever objects present themselves to consciousness are the products
of some more fundamental type of "touching" between the mind
and--something else. Our first thesis here is that Derrida falls squarely within
this "Midas" tradition in the interpretation of intentionality: a
tradition which very few philosophers in the modern period--possibly only
Husserl, though the most common reading does not even exempt him--have managed
to escape. It seems clear that intentionality for Derrida really is a kind of making:
a making that is always a re-making, thus moving all "objects"--the
individual as well as the universal--into the realm of the ideal as he
understands it, and simultaneously doing "violence" to that from
which this `ideal' object of consciousness is produced, as well as to the
produced object itself. Our second thesis will be that his view is descriptively
false to the facts of consciousness, and driven by metaphysical
prejudices--perhaps, ultimately, historical prejudices--which he not only never
rationally supports, but which are in fact rationally insupportable--perhaps by
his own insistence.
Beginning with Bergson
The Midas tradition extends into obscure antiquity. Locke and Kant are the
most obvious members of it from within the "Modern" period of
philosophy; and they, of course, are highly instructive to study in clarifying
its dynamics. But here we shall begin with Bergson, who, in truth, left so very
little for Derrida to say. Emmanuel Levinas has recently tried to remind us of
the extent to which Bergson pre-empted the later critiques of technological
rationalism and "logocentrism" with his own form of "life"
philosophy and his analysis of the relationship between concepts, language,
history and duree.1 But Bergson remained a basically
hopeful philosopher. Perhaps there should be no serene philosophers in a
world where, increasingly, only sour resentment and despair seemed
appropriate--especially toward the intellect, which had proven astonishingly
inept at realizing the hopes of the Enlightenment for humankind. Thus Bergson's
name and spirit practically disappeared, though his substance continued to be of
great historical effect in the work of people who might be embarassed to be
associated with him.
Now we find Bergson saying that:
"...what I see and hear of the outer world is purely and simply a
selection made by my senses to serve as a light to my conduct....My senses and
my consciousness, therefore, give me no more than a practical simplification
of reality. In the vision they furnish me of myself and things, the
differences that are useless to man are obliterated, the resemblances that are
useful to him are emphasized; ways are traced out for me in advance, along
which my activity is to travel. These ways are the ways which all mankind has
trod before me. Things have been classified with a view to the use I can
derive from them. And it is this classification I perceive, far more clearly
than the color and shape of things.... The individuality of things escapes
us.... In short, we do not see the actual things themselves; in most cases we
confine ourselves to reading the labels affixed to them.... The
word...intervenes between it and ourselves....
"Not only external objects, but even our own mental states, are
screened from us in their inmost, their personal aspects, in the original life
they possess.... We catch only the impersonal aspect of our feelings, that
aspect which speech has set down once for all because it is almost the same,
in the same conditions, for all men. Thus, even in our own individual,
individuality escapes our ken.... [W]e live in a zone midway between things
and ourselves, externally to things, externally also to ourselves."2
Of course Bergson did concede that metaphysical "intuition" and the
experience of art allow us, upon occasion, to get to the individual, and
thus, with reference to the self, to "grasp something that has nothing in
common with language, certain rhythms of life and breath that are closer to man
than his inmost feelings, being the living law--varying with each individual--of
his enthusiasm and despair, his hopes and regrets." (p. 154) Although they
all decry the "objective" mode of knowledge, there still is some kind
of "knowledge"--for Bergson as well as for the Existentialists and for
Derrida himself--which accesses what cannot be accessed "objectively"
or "logocentrically.."
Sartre and the Touch
Sartre at one point gave great promise of escaping the Midas model, with some
help from Husserl. In his brilliant little note, "Une idee fondamentale de
la `Phenomenologie' de Husserl, l'intentionnalite," which appeared in La
nouvelle revue francaise for January of 1939, he deftly skewered the
idealisms of Brunschvicg, Lalande and Meyerson by describing how, for them,
"....the mental spider draws things into its web, covers them with a
pale spittle, and slowly swallows them, turning them into its own substance.
What is a table, a stone, or a house? It is a certain assemblage of `contents
of consciousness', a arrangement of those contents. An alimentary philosophy!
How evidently true! Is not the table the actual content of my perceptions? And
is not my perception the present state of my consciousness?.... In vain did
the more simple and uncultivated among us search for something solid,
something which, at last, was not mental. Everywhere we were met only by a
flabby mixture in which we discerned ---ourselves!"
By contrast, Sartre notes,
"Husserl never ceased to assert that the thing cannot be dissolved
into consciousness. You see, possibly, this tree here. But you see it there at
the roadside, just there where it is. --- Amidst the dust. Alone and withered
in the heat. Twenty leagues from the Mediterranian coast. It could not enter
into your consciousness, for it is not of the same nature as your consciousness."3
But, alas! Hopes are only to be dashed. By the time we get to Being and
Nothingness, if not earlier, the table, stone, tree, etc., which was saved
from being "mental," now proves to be something that, through its
necessary "world," is internally related to, and so could not exist
without, the "pour-soi," "Dasein," or
"Nothingness"--and now we must also say the "differance"--that
alone can explain the the possibility of a world--of a structure of
identities and differences opened up by interwoven "nots" or
"lacks." (See "Part Two" of Being and Nothingness.)
This is, today, a familiar story, and needs no elaboration. The only consolation
it offers us is that tables and trees are, at least, not parts of someone's
mind. But, under such headings as the "noematic," the
"non-real," or the "ideal," their substance has
nevertheless been transformed by `the Midas touch' of consciousness, generously
interpreted, into something that, whether "mental" or not, would not
exist without "the mental spider"--now, however, a spider conceived in
social/ historical/linguistic terms and inscribed front and back with names such
as Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Saussure, Freud, Levi-Strauss, etc.
Exempting Husserl
When we turn to Derrida's writings, two significant points become very clear.
One is that the overall view of the "world" of science and common
sense objects expressed by Bergson and Sartre, according to which it is a product
of human reality, is the one accepted by Derrida. Admittedly, his presentation
of this view significantly differs at certain points from that of his
predecessors--including Heidegger, to whom he no doubt is closest. But the
cognitive substance of what he says remains much the same as the views of
Bergson and Sartre. We will come back to this claim below, to give it a basis in
the Derridian texts.
The other point is that Derrida certainly believes that the view of the world
and of the objects of science outlined above, according to which they are
fundamentally "products" of Dasein, is also the view of
Husserl. I shall not try to support this claim here, because I think any careful
reading of Derrida's Edmund Husserl's Origin of Geometry: An
Introduction and Speech and Phenomena will amply show it to be true.
He believes this, I think, because he accepts the interpretation of Husserl
according to which the objects of consciousness are noemata.4
And
I strongly agree that Husserl can be exempted from the tradition of the Midas
touch only if he does not hold that objects of consciousness are,
in general, noemata.
But in my opinion he did not hold that noemata are the objects
of consciousness--and also did not equate the ideal with the unreal, as Derrida
constantly assumes. To the contrary, for him the usual objects of consciousness,
whether real or ideal, are not noemata--though noemata can, of course, be taken
as objects of consciousness in special acts directed, precisely, upon them--and
those "usual" objects would continue to exist and to be what they are
if all consciousness disappeared from the universe. Such objects, that is, as
stars and galaxies, worms and algae, trees and stones, colors and shapes,
concepts and numbers. Not some "metaphysical correlate" of them, but
these themselves as they may now be given to a veridical consciousness. And, for
Husserl, even such objects as would disappear with consciousness, e.g.
acts of consciousness themselves, would not disappear because they ceased to be
"present," but because they make up consciousness.
Derrida's views are parasitical upon Husserl's texts. His interpretations of
Husserl's views enter essentially into, and (in a rhetorical manner) provide
substantial force for, his own presentations. So it will be appropriate to refer
to a few passages from Ideas I in support of my claims about Husserl's
views, though I cannot hope here to set aside what has by now become an
entrenched interpretation of them. In truth, he is not misread in the manner
indicated for lack of his explicit statements to the contrary. Subsection 43 of Ideas
I is headed, "Light on a Fundamental Error." The fundamental error
in question is that of "supposing that perception (and, each in their own
way, every other type of thing intuition) fails to arrive at the thing
itself" because of the appearances necessary to see it--except in the case
of God who allegedly cognizes them "without mediation through
`appearances'." The idea is that appearances prevent us from seeing
what appears. Indeed, the spatial thing can only be given to us in connection
with appearances, which it always exceeds or transcends. But "the spatial
thing which we see is, despite all its transcendence, perceived, given in
person to consciousness. An image or sign is not given in its
place." (Cf. subsection 10 of the VIth "Logical Investigation")
The standard reading of Husserl today--even among many who agree that the
object is for him not the noema--is that the transcendent and possibly real
object is only a something referred to by means of the corresponding noemata or
appearances, which of course are mind/language/ history dependent insofar as
they are temporal events. But Husserl holds there to be an unbridgeable
difference of essence between consciousness via meanings or symbols and
perception. In the former case "we intuit something in consciousness
as imaging or signitively pointing to something else. Having the one within our
field of intuition, we are not directed upon it, but, through the medium of a
founded apprehending, upon the other: the imaged, the designated. But there is
none of this in the perception, as little as in plain and simple recollection or
phantasy." The tree, table, etc. is directly present to us, no matter how
complicated the act in which it is given.
Moreover, what is intuited in the usual perception does not mean,
is not of or about, something else, as the appearance or noema most certainly
is. This writing pad is not of something, as its appearances as well as
acts of perceiving it are, each in their own way, of it. Both the
intentional experience ("act") and the corresponding noema
("appearance") have a content and, based therein, a reference to an
object, the object being the same for both. (See end of subsection 129 of Ideas
I) But for Husserl the object itself has, in the usual case, neither content
nor object in that same sense, and hence is neither act nor noema (appearance).
So the ("usual") object is not a noema.
Finally, all objects, even when they are experienced, come to consciousness as
being there prior to their being known, and not as being produced or as
being dependent upon the acts or appearances in which they come to
consciousness. (See subsections 45 and 52) He is especially emphatic about the
absurdity of holding ideal objects (essences) to be produced by psychical acts.
(subsection 22) Any alleged dependence of our usual objects upon mental
activities is not something findable, but can only be derived from
metaphysical prejudice. Appearances (whether called noemata or not) are
radically different kinds of things from trees and tables. You only have to
attend to their details to see. To suppose that we might not be able to tell
when we are contemplating a table and when we are contemplating the appearance
of a table is to make a astounding, gratuitous concession from which there is no
recovery in philosophical work. For what could possibly be more obvious than
that a table is not an appearance of a table--once you attend to what an
appearance of a table is?
One of Husserl's discussions concerns the claim "that when we think we
perceive, e.g., the property of white, we really only perceive, or otherwise
present to ourselves, a resemblance between the apparent object and other
objects...." In a manner characteristic of his whole approach he responds
that here
"...in the face of all Evidenz an object evidently different
from our intentional object has been substituted for it. The thing comprised
in my intuition's intention, the thing I think that I am grasping perceptually
or imaging in phantasy stands by and large above all dispute. I may be
deceived as to the existence of the object of perception, but not as to the
fact that I do perceive it as determined in this or that way, that my
percept's target is not some totally different object, a pine tree, e.g.,
instead of a cockroach. This Evidenz in characterizing
description (or in identification and distinction of intentional objects),
has, no doubt, its understandable limits, but it is true and genuine Evidenz."
(IInd "Logical Investigation," subsection 37)
My hope is that considerations such as these will strongly suggest, at least,
that Husserl is not in the Midas touch tradition of epistemology. Or, in any
case, that the line of interpretation that puts him there by treating his
noemata as the objects of the usual acts of consciousness is mistaken. And
surely there is no other ground in his writings for associating him with that
tradition.
Derrida's Position
By contrast, a very simple line of reasoning locates Derrida squarely in the
Midas tradition:
- The everyday objects of consciousness and discourse (or the objects of the
usual consciousness and discourse) have their being as "presence,"
in his special sense of the term.
- Presence involves a certain self-containedness and discreteness that alone
makes re-identification and identity possible. But this "presence"
results only from ab-straction: a pulling-away-from, an ex-traction from the
logocentrically ineffable and yet essential union with what, at the level of
ordinary discourse, is different from, outside of, that which has presence.
- This "ex-traction" to create "beings" (with lower case
"b"), things "present" (the usual sorts of objects), is
the work of naming and predication. That is, of language.
These two linguistic functions constitute a `violence' to the
"deeper" unification of beings where the arche-writing of differance
without identity reigns. It thus gives rise to trees, tables, persons
(subjects), as well as to numbers and colors and virtues, etc. Without it
they would lack presence and would not exist.
- Naming and predication are functions of language, and hence of
"transcendental historicity," not of individual minds--which, as beings,
are themselves only results (in some sense) of naming and predication.
- But while language and historicity are "more" than individual
human beings, they do not produce beings apart from individual human
beings.
____________________
Hence: Ordinary objects, beings, things "present," are
after all the outcome of individual minds ("inhabited" by or
"inhabiting" language and historicity, to be sure) touching (being
touched by) originary unity or process and transforming "something" of
"it" into trees, tables, persons, etc. Without such minds there would
be no world of beings. This is our first thesis, stated above.
Derrida's System
To explain the reasoning back of this thesis we look more closely at
Derrida's system. He has a system of thought. Not that he denies this.
Indeed, he affirms it--with his standard qualifiers.5 And what he
says about the limits of "system," as one link in the logocentric
conceptual chain, is a part of his system. But what must be emphasized is that
he does tell us how things essentially stand. His writings are
full of synthetic apriori statements--e.g. that "It is impossible for any
identity to be closed in upon itself, on the inside of its proper interiority,
or on its coincidence with itself. The irreducibility of spacing is the
irreducibility of the other." Or: "There cannot be a unique sign for a
unique thing."6 His claim that in certain areas we cannot,
strictly, state essence is a part of his report on, precisely, how things
essentially stand. This is not changed at all by his further claim that the
"telling" of how things essentially stand must be done by putting
stress on the logocentric framework and causing it to "tremble" by
showing that its constitutive contrasts--especially the one between presence and
absence--require that the opposing terms inhabit each other through the dynamism
of differance and "trace." In this regard he is only one more
in a long line of 19th and 20th century philosophers who have held that the
"real philosophical stuff" can only be shown and cannot be said.
Derrida's system is basically tripartite. It is strongly Kantian. Another
close parallel would be Critical Realism as practiced in Anglo-American
philosophy of this century. In each case, the world of objects of science and
common sense--including the individual self--is treated as a result of some
deeper level of "interaction" between factors of what there is. The
three dimensions of the "system" are:
- The realm of identifiable (re-identifiable) objects or beings,
including the self, the Being of which is, according to Derrida, presence.
For these, to be is to be present or have presence, which is achievable only
through the violence of predication. "There is no presence," he
says, "before and outside semiological differance..."7
- The realm of differance, of a deferring and differing, of a
movement that is neither active nor passive, that does not involve or
presuppose, and yet somehow makes place for, identities capable of presence,
objects of the everyday sort. (Margins, pp. 9-11) This is the realm
of the "infrastructure," --of the tain of the mirror which has no
resemblance to the objects mirrored but makes it possible for them to be
reflected--of which, according to Derrida, there is no name, essence or science.8
- The interaction between the realm of beings and the realm of differance,
as "the process of scission and division which would produce or
constitute different things or differences." (Margins, p. 9)
Naming and Predication as "Violence"
Here we are especially interested in the status of the world of ordinary
objects or beings. They originate, as we have indicated, through a certain violence.
"The structure of violence is complex," Derrida holds,
"and its possibility--writing--is no less so....To name, to give names
that it will on occasion be forbidden to pronounce, such is the originary
violence of language which consists in inscribing within a difference, in
classifying, in suspending the vocative absolute. To think the unique within
the system, to inscribe it there, such is the gesture of the arche-writing:
arche-violence, loss of the proper, of absolute proximity, of self-presence,
in truth the loss of what has never taken place, of a self-presence which has
never been given but only dreamed of and always already split, repeated,
incapable of appearing to itself except in its own disappearance."9
Proper names, indeed, never function except as "a designation of
appurtenance and a linguistico-social classification." (Gramm. p.
111) What is really at work in names is a system of classification, expressed in
predicates, through which things are designated in terms of their other,
subjected to "the violence of difference, of classification, and of the
system of appelations." (p. 110) Within the organized meanings of a
language, nothing ever just is what it is called. What is made
present in the predicate or name is treated as just this. The mastery
that comes from this making something to be present founds "a sort
of infinite assurance. The power of repetition that the eidos and ousia
made available seems to acquire an absolute independence. Ideality and
substantiality relate to themselves in the element of the res cogitans,
by a movement of pure auto-affection. Consciousness is the experience of pure
auto-affection." (Gramm pp. 97-98)
Whatever is an object of linguistic meaning will, therefore, always be
characteristically different from whatever is not an object--specifically, it
will always have the presence which makes it a being. And yet, as
classified, it also bears the essential traces of its other within it--as the
letter "a" is marked by its place in the system of the alphabet, its
relationships with the other letters. Thus, even "The thing itself is a
sign." (Gramm p. 49) That is, it always points to the absent which
is present within it through the relationships implicit in its classification or
kind. Thus: "From the moment that there is meaning there is nothing but
signs. We think only in signs." (p. 50) The signified which
transcends the system of signifiers is an illusion. "Writing" he says,
is "the impossibility of a chain arresting itself on a signified that would
not relaunch this signified, in that the signified is already in the position of
the signifying substitution."10
Two Crucial Clarifications
Yet the being that is given or taken as present is not, for Derrida, an
illusion. In his interview with Kearney he responds vigorously to the oft
repeated claim that he denies the existence of the subject, the person--and by
implication of other "substances":
"I have never said that the subject should be dispensed with. Only
that it should be deconstructed. To deconstruct the subject does not mean to
deny its existence. There are subjects, `operations' or `effects` of
subjectivity. This is an incontrovertible fact. To acknowledge this does not
mean, however, that the subject is what it says it is. The subject is
not some extra-linguistic substance or identity, some pure cogito of
self-presence; it is always inscribed in language. My work does not,
therefore, destroy the subject; it simply tries to resituate it."11
This is a highly important statement for interpreting Derrida's views. The
beings (whose Being is presence) really do exist--though Derrida, like Heidegger,
never provides a clarification of what it is, in general, for something to be:
of the difference between being and not-being. (The distinction between the
being and its Being--the ontico-ontological difference-- gets all the attention
and the difference between being and not-being gets lost.) Trees and tables,
colors and numbers, are, even though without the violence which enables
them, forces them, to have "presence" they would not exist.
This clarification goes hand in hand with another important statement to
Kearny. Derrida emphatically rejects the view "that deconstruction is a
suspension of reference," along with those critiques which see his
"work as a declaration that there is nothing beyond language, that we are
imprisoned in language."12
It is, he says,
"the exact opposite. The critique of logocentrism is above all else the
search for the `other'and the `other of language'." He refers to those who
(referring to him) treat `Post-Structuralism' as the view "that there is
nothing beyond language, that we are submerged in words--and other stupidities
of that sort." True,
"deconstruction tries to show that the question of reference is much
more complex and problematic than traditional theories supposed....[And] the
other, which is beyond language and which summons language, is perhaps not a
`referent' in the normal > sense which linguists have attached to this
term. But to distance oneself thus..., does not amount to saying there is nothing
beyond language." (p. 123-124)
These highly significant correctives to popular misunderstandings must be
kept in mind. However, one must also be clear about what it is in Derrida's
texts that gives rise to such misunderstandings. It is his view that
the usual sorts of objects, including and especially linguistic signs themselves
(WD p. 50), have a being tied to the kind of identity (re-identifiability,
hence freedom from context, hence ideality) which they possess. That is,
a Being which is presence. To be is, for them, to have presence. And presence
does not belong to anything apart from significations or concepts, which do not
exist outside of language. (Here as usual add in all of the deconstructive
points about "inside/outside.") On the other hand, differance,
trace, mark, etc. do not exist or have an essence13 --when
"exist" is used to indicate the Being of what has presence. What is
`outside' of language does not "exist"--even if in some sense (which
Derrida can hardly be said to have made comprehensible) it "has
Being." Accordingly it is hardly appropriate, though it is understandable,
for him to refer to "stupidities of that sort." The problem is not
stupidity, and Derrida should accept his share of responsibility for the
misunderstanding. Clearly, for him, the world of objects with presence
would not exist but for language and its gathering and dissemination
significations; for presence, the self-identity that gives logocentrism its
power and allows us to subject beings to standard logic, mathematics, and the
like, is a function of language--even of "writing" in the usual
sense of that term. What that `other' is that transcends, lies outside of,
language (again, in the usual sense) can hardly be regarded as obvious.
The Midas Touch Remains
Let us now grant to Derrida that language and meanings are not the
inventions, are not produced or brought into being, by individual
subjects. The beings of our world are formed by a historical reality. Can
Derrida, given this, escape the charge of subjectivism, of being in the
"Midas touch" tradition of epistemology? I don't see how. Language and
historicity do not obtain and have effects in their own right. Derrida more than
most wants to reject action from a heavenly "safe place." If
individuals are at the disposal of language and history, owe their beingly Being
to it, it is also true that language and history certainly have power only
through their insertion into individuals (or through insertion of individuals
into them). The being and action of significations is not indifferent to that of
persons. While language and history are indifferent to any arbitrary individual
subject, they are totally dependent upon the existence and activities of
language users. Concepts and signs do not have a being apart from individual
humans: one from where, irrespective of individuals, they might gather the
logocentrically re-identifiable object into that degree of presence (never complete
or unadulterated with absence, of course) which allows it to be (have
presence)--which allows there to be oak trees in North America, for instance.
Language and significations require the existence of historically developing
communities of communication. It is for the individuals that make up such
communities, not for language or history apart from them, that there is a world
and that there are oak trees in North America. Language is existentially
dependent upon the individual subjects, though not on any one of them in
particular. This is not lessened by the fact that the subjects must be qualified
in a certain fashion that has developed historically. And it does not really
help, I think, to point out that to raise the question about individual subject
and language in this way is to fall back into the oppositional structures of
logocentrism (or of "metaphysics" or even "philosophy," in
Derrida's special sense). However you interpret it, the fact remains that
language is powerless to structure objects except through the actions of
individuals. Contact with individual minds "results" in beings. No
contact, no beings. Of course the minds are beings too--but then nothing is
every just what it is for Derrida.
The Intentional Nexus in Deconstruction
These remarks bring to light the fact that Derrida really has no account at
all of how language (conceptual systems) and the self relate to each
other and to the objects present to or through them. In this he is like the
anti-psychologistic logicians of the early and mid-20th century, who divorced
the science of logic from mental events so far that they could not longer
explain how logic could serve in the critique of actual thought and discourse.14
Derrida wants to avoid both empiricism and platonism. He tries to do this by
introducing senses (concepts, essences, significations) which provide a moving
structure without reference to an absolute beginning or end. But this is where
the properly phenomenological critique of his views begins to take hold. For the
fact is that he simply has no account of how sense history enters into the
individual mind or minds at a given time to yield the correlative world of
beings--including subjects. His investigations are, apparently, not even
intended to operate at that level of analysis. The result is that in fleeing
from origins, transcendental signifieds and the like, he leaves us with no
positive analysis of intentionality: of the grounds (in the act and in
the object) of the intentional grasp of the object by the act. And even if it
were shown that a logocentric account of this nexus cannot be wholly
correct, it does not follow that no account is available or required.
Instead of doing the canonical phenomenological labor of examining particular
cases where an act of a certain type is directed upon its object, he contents
himself with general argumentations derived from selected associations of
certain terms. The basic term examined is, of course,
"representation." This term, he states, can be understood "in the
sense of re-presentation, as repetition or reproduction of presentation, as the Vergegenwaertigung
which modifies a Praesentation or Gegenwaertigung. And it can be
understood as what takes the place of, what occupies the place of, another Vorstellung
(Repraesentation, Repraesentant, Stellvertreter)."15
Thus the specific phenomenon of intentionality (ofness, aboutness) is ignored in
favor of what Derrida will call differance, in the form of repetition
(being the "same" as, though not merely "identical" with)
and replacement.
But now a few questions must be asked. First, do we not know that the
affinity which my present perception has with this computer screen, its
intentional bearing upon it, is not a matter of the latter (or the former) being
a repetition of and/or replacement for the former (or the latter). Isn't it just
nonsense to suppose that any part of my perception or that perception as a whole
repeats or replaces the screen? Can any of Derrida's points about difference
change this? Secondly, how would it assist my act to be about the screen if part
of it did repeat of replace the screen or conversely? After all, `repeating' and
`replacing' often occur in contexts where they do not involve the repeated or
replaced standing in the intentional nexus with what repeats or replaces it.
Just as, contrary to the suggestion of many, similarity is too general a trait
to use as an analysis of "ofness" or representation, so with differance.
One sees evidence in many of Derrida's statements that he has simply lost the
sense of basic semantical and intentionalistic terms. For example, one of his
more well-known theses is that "even within so-called phonetic writing, the
`graphic' signifier refers to the phoneme through a web of many dimensions which
binds it, like all signifiers, to other written and oral signifiers, within a
`total' system open, let us say, to all possible investments of sense." (Gramm
p. 45) Now in fact the graphic signifer does not refer to the phoneme at
all. It is not of or about or intentionally directed upon it. It has some sort
of relationship to it, and perhaps what Derrida says about differance
casts some light upon that relationship. But to speak of "reference"
here is simply to deprive the word of any utility for semantic analysis. A
similar point is to be made for the claim that the signified always becomes a
sign because an absence always inhabits its presence. The differance
structures of Derrida are found just about everywhere, so far as I can tell. But
intentionality, the affinity of a given act or sign with its specific object, is
a specific type of union which, on the whole, appears to be pretty rare in the
universe. We have to consider the possibility that, distracted by his ingeneous
and fruitful insights into differance, Derrida has yet to discover or
discuss intentionality. A general point about sameness (namely, that where
present it is never simply "identity," but always
"deconstructs" to exhibit "otherness," always necessarily
involves difference, when examined with care--and what else was it that F. H.
Bradley and many others like him taught us?) cannot be turned into a
philosophical account of practically everything, even if it does suggest
intriguing things about Western culture and history.
Voice and Consciousness
Derrida's discussion of voice and consciousness--an indispensable cornerstone
of his entire system--shows the same phenomenological flaws as noted above.
"Why," he asks, "is the epoch of the phone also the epoch
of being in the form of presence, that is, of ideality?" (SP p. 74)
His answer is that voice "is a medium that does not impair the presence and
self-presence of the acts that aim at" the (always ideal) signified. (pp.
75-76) "The ideality of the object, which is only its being-for a
nonempirical consciousness, can only be expressed in an element whose
phenomenality does not have a worldly form....My words are `alive' because they
seem not to leave me: not to fall outside me, outside my breath, at a visible
distance...." (p. 76)
"The `apparent transcendence' of the voice thus results from the fact
that the signified, which is always ideal by essence, the `expressed' Bedeutung,
is immediately present in the act of expression. This immediate presence
results from the fact that the phenomenological `body' of the signifier seems
to fade away at the very moment it is produced; it seems already to belong to
the element of ideality. It phenomenologically reduces itself, transforming
the worldly opacity of its body into pure diaphaneity." (p. 77)
Thus, "the signifier, animated by my breath and by the
meaning-intention...is in absolute proximity to me. The living act...seems not
to separate itself from itself, from its own self-presence." (p. 77) Thus
it becomes paradigmatic of beings (with small "b"). "The subject
can hear or speak to himself and be affected by the signifer he produces,
without passing through an external detour, the world, the sphere of what is not
`his own'. Every other form of auto-affection must...pass through what is
outside the sphere of `ownness'...." (78) This leads Derrida to hold that
"de jure and by virtue of its structure, no consciousness is
possible without the voice. The voice is the being which is present to itself in
the form of universality, as con-sciousness; the voice is
consciousness." (pp. 79-80)
Now we must note, to begin with, that Derrida here does not trouble himself
to describe in detail a specific case of the experience of voice or speech. He
begins von oben, with the general claim that an object is ideal
and so can only be expressed--we are never told why--by "an element"
also exerpted from the context of real or worldly existence. His next claim is
that my speech, my spoken words, seem not to leave me and take on separate
existence, but to fade away, allowing the signified to be (to seem?) immediately
present in the act of expression, thus giving the act the type of undivided
self-identity and ideality that characterizes beings: allowing the immediate
presence of the signified in the act of expression.
But let us look at some facts. Speech, my words, in soliloquy or in colloquy,
are sounds experienced as located in my specific parts of my body. When I
say there is great danger of war in the Middle East, the words used are
experienced as sounds moving in and from my chest and throat. (Try it and
see. That is the simple phenomenological test.) When things are in good
working order, speaking may be relatively effortless, but it is never a case of
unmediated auto-affection, as anyone learning to speak a new language (to make
the unaccustomed sounds with their bodily parts) or suffering from a good case
of laryngitis can easily testify.
The crucial difference between spoken and written symbolism has nothing to do
with "proximity," but with the fact that speech consists of events,
while writing consists in continuants or substances which are the results of
events. Spoken words do not become "diaphanous." In the manner of events
they simply cease to exist after an appropriate temporal elongation, which is
very different from becoming diaphanous. But they no more have a special
proximity to the act of expression than, for example, the movements of the
fingers in the sign language of the deaf, which utilizes space and not sound.
Once these matters are clear from the descriptive analysis of actual
speaking, we will then understand that to say that no conciousness is possible
without speech is to say something obviously false. Consciousness constantly
and mainly occurs without corresponding speech. Hence, consciousness is
not essentially linguistic. This, as a matter of historical fact, is a point
upon which all of the great philosophers through the centuries (Plato,
Descartes, Kant, etc.), up to and including Husserl, agreed. Perhaps because
simple description of the details of specific events in our conscious life will
show it to be so. (How to explain the 20th century reversal on this point is
another matter.) And if to claim that voice is consciousness, that no
consciousness is possible without speech, is not to say something
obviously false, it is to use the word "voice" in a way that has
nothing to do with actual speech or language. As, for example, when voice is
said to be consciousness--where, so far as I can tell, speech or `voice'
is (falsely) assigned the absolute self-presence often said to be the essence of
consciousness. Here, instead of an honest reference to language, a cosmic
principle of the most obscure nature (differance, "writing") is
invoked.
So it emerges, in my opinion, that Derrida does not really have a view of the
specific phenomenon of intentionality or meaning. However intriguing in other
respects, his reflections on differance cast no light on how language
(name, predicate) works through individual minds to accomplishes presence and
thereby the corresponding "objects." They also provide no
understanding of wherein consists that peculiar affinity or selectivity of the
act (or sign), bearing upon its object or referent, that we call "intentionality."
It is not so much that his account is wrong as that it really is no account at
all of these matters.
NOTES
- A quoi pensent les philosophes, edited by Jacques
Message, Joel Roman and Etienne Tassin, (Paris: Autrement Revue, 1988), p.
53-54. Return to text.
- Henri Bergson, Laughter: An Essay on the Meaning of the
Comic, translated by C. Brereton and F. Rothwell, (New York: The
Macmillan Co., 1921), pp. 151ff. Return to
text.
- Translated by Joseph P. Fell in the Journal of the
British Society for Phenomenology, I, 1970, pp. 4-5. Return
to text.
- Jacques Derrida, Writing and Difference, translated
by Alan Bass, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978), p. 135.
{Hereafter referred to as "WD".} Return
to text.
- Jacques Derrida, Positions, translated by Alan
Bass, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981), p. 3. {Hereafter
referred to as "Positions".} Return
to text.
- Positions, p. 94, and Jacques Derrida, Of
Grammatology, translated by Gayatri Spivak, (Baltimore: The Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1976), p. 284. {Hereafter referred to as "Gramm".}
Return to text.
- Positions, p. 28; cf. Jacques Derrida, Margins
of Philosophy, translated by Alan Bass, (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1982), p. 12. {Hereafter referred to as "Margins".} Return
to text.
- Gramm pp. 49 & 93; cf. Rodolphe Gasche, The
Tain of the Mirror, (Cambridge, MA.: Harvard University Press, 1986),
pp. 6-7, 242. Return to text.
- Gramm p. 112; WD pp. 147-149. Return
to text.
- Positions p. 82; cf. WD p. 25. Return
to text.
- Richard Kearney, Dialogues with Contemporary
Continental Thinkers: The Phenomenological Heritage, (Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 1984), p. 125. Cf. Positions p. 88. Return
to text.
- Kearney, p. 123. Cf. Ynhui Park, "Derrida ou la
prison du language," Philosophy, (Seoul, Korea), 1983, pp.
151-162. Return to text.
- Gramm p. 167, Margins 21-25 Return
to text.
- Discussed in my Logic and the Objectivity of Knowledge,
(Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1984), Chapter IV. Return
to text.
- Jacques Derrida, Speech and Phenomena, (Evanston:
Northwestern University Press, 1973), p. 49. {Hereafter referred to as
"SP'.} Return to text.