Singing the World: Merleau-Ponty's Phenomenology of Language

Philosophy Today 42 (3):319-336 (1998)
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Abstract

Drawing on Merleau-Ponty's recognition of a prepersonal stage and dimension of our embodied experience to carry forward his phenomenology of language, this essay elaborates the significance of Merleau-Ponty's phrase "singing the world" and gives new inspiration to the metaphysical longing for a revelation of the "origin" of language, displacing this "origin" from its mythic sites to let it be heard within our experience of speaking. This experience is both diachronic (stages) and synchronic (structural dimensions): first, our prepersonal attunement to the soundings in our auditory field; second, our experience of speaking the inherited language; third, a recuperation of that first communicative attunement

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