Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Perception. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Perception. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 30 janvier 2018

Conférences Samedi 10 mars 2018

 
Lorenzo Marinucci  (Università di Roma “Tor Vergata”) 

Titre : « Different Smellscapes: Olfactory Patterns through the Japanese Worldview »


Résumé : Greek-European philosophy has a distinct partiality towards vision, since its beginnings. This “optocentrism” has had a deep influence on its ontology, and even phenomenological attempts (from Husserl to Merleau-Ponty) of an unbiased access to experience do not fully manage to overcome it.

Can “the oral sensorium” (Tellenbach) of taste and smell offer a different access to reality, even far different from common sense? Can a philosophy or phenomenology of smell offer very different insights on space, time, aesthetic consciousness and desire? And does it help to pose these two questions cross-culturally, since European cultural history has never explored smell with much attention?

In this presentation I would like to address this problem by gathering examples of “smellscapes” (as organized, located, conceptual-sensual nexuses) within Japanese culture. The attention for the invisible, formless and impermanent in Japanese thought and aesthetics has given to smell a meaning and a relevance that exceeds greatly what we can see in European culture, up to its late rediscovery in French culture by Bergson and Proust.