Saturday, July 17, 2010

LIVING IN THRESHOLD

LIVING IN THRESHOLD
Thresholds, the space where we enter a house and where we leave it, it is where we don’t dwell. The threshold designates the passing from one state to another, from the inside to the outside, or the point where things start to become different. A threshold is a step to overcome, a passage in itself, a moment of opening significant in anthropology of rituals, a hyphen that separates and unites at the same time. Nevertheless, in philosophy, the threshold also expresses the human condition itself, a state that we never leave, a state we should not even try to overcome because it concentrates our whole being. The threshold would then be a “zone” as Walter Benjamin calls it, a space where man evolves, always “in between”. On the threshold of the other, as in Martin Buber’s thought, or always on the verge of becoming as Henri Bergson describes “the creation of the self by the self”, the state of the human condition is on the threshold of being. The Hegelian becoming also is a threshold, the overcoming of the self in a dynamic momentum. In order to introduce the threshold as a technical term in philosophical vocabulary, we suggest the theme of “soglitude”, taking its etymology from the Italian word soglia for threshold and the consonance of the solitary state of the human condition, a loneliness however that always leads to another world, another being, or matter, or even colour. Forever on the threshold of the other, the other person he encounters or the other world he discovers, man is always in between things, interacting and creating a symbiosis with the world in which he evolves. The state on the threshold, the “soglitude”, could well be the deep tonality of the human condition itself. Not a temporary state but rather the expression of the passing and becoming all in one, the movement and the stillness, the link between time passing and the moment that escapes us.
EXTRACTED INTERESTING READ FROM A CFP

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