In my first post, On
Language, for the sake of time I allowed myself to ignore the semantic
difference between the words “object” and “symbol.” Here, though, I am forced
to introduce the idea because much of the discussion revolves around the idea
of “symbol” as the representation of a thing and “object” as the concrete
thing in itself.
“What is
frequently appreciated in many so-called symbols is exactly their vagueness,
their openness, their fruitful ineffectiveness to express a ‘final’ meaning, so
that with symbols and by symbols one indicates what is always
beyond one’s reach.”[1]
For
instance, a symbolic gesture does not attempt to get an immediate concrete
effect much like a symbol may not even reflect a concrete object. But this is
understood to mean that while they may themselves be abstractions, it is still
likely that a symbol can be extrapolated to within the realm of concrete
objects. In other words, a symbol can represent an abstract idea which, in
turn, has attached itself to a very concrete object. An example of this could
be Brick Tamland’s “I love lamp.” The very abstract symbol of his
feeling of love is representative not of a vague abstraction but simply of
the physical object of the lamp. Hence, the lamp can be seen, or at least
interpreted, as the concrete symbol of his abstract love.
And here is
where I can begin my discussion of hope. Hope is another fairly abstract
feeling: one of expectation or desire. Hope is almost always seen as a positive
part of the human psyche, just don’t tell Red.[2] Despair, on the other
hand, is more of an ethereal concept, rather than a kind of “thing,” so to
speak. I say this because despair, like darkness or cold, is defined not in and
of itself but as simply the absence of something else, in this case, obviously,
hope.
An internal
discussion that I have been having for a few days now started with the
question: Is it healthy to attach the entirety of one’s hope onto an abstraction or, in my specific case, an abstraction... of an abstraction bound to
a physical, and wholly concrete, object? Meaning: hope through the lens of the potential,
as the first abstraction, of a second abstraction, which I will not
explain at this time, based on the object. And while the answer to this
question may vary widely from person to person, with the eternal optimist
arguing that one should always find hope in anything they can find and the
pessimist arguing that all hope is inevitably futile, my own answer, based on
my pseudo-positivistic outlook, would probably be no - it is not healthy.
However, if
an incident occurs that causes the hope to be shattered, which it recently has,
one cannot help but find themselves grasping at straws in order to not fall
into an abyss of despair. In fighting this, probably inevitable, despair, I
have taken a bit of solace in the fact that I was able to entangle myself in
another, albeit very similar, question: is it better to have had that one
glimmer of hope and lost it or to never have had hope at all?
I will ponder this question as I desperately search for
something to fill the void or even, perhaps, somehow, someway, try to rekindle that hope
I once had.
But, I suppose we will only truly know the answer to that question if I
can somehow find myself sanding an old boat... on the beach... in Zihuatanejo.
Hope is man's greatest strength, but you cannot pick up water once it is spilled.
ReplyDeleteIt would have benn better if you hadn't cited Red. If you don't get the reference, tough titties. The abstract abstractions abstracted from other abstracts was rather dizzying if I say so myself. As far as whether it's better to have lost hope then never hoped at all, just ask Sean Maguire. Speaking from experience, losing hope sucks a fat one.
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