Wednesday, October 21, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page F1ve Wednesday, October 21, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I"age Five Bu William 1. Clements Library Themes from Merle M a u r i c e Merleau - Ponty' THEMES FROM THE LEC- TURES AT THE COLLEGE DE FRANCE, translated by J. O' Neil, Northwestern University Press, $500. By NEAL BRUSS Merleau - Ponty's short "themes" do not communicate any unpredictably new ideas, but they are quite revealing as robust approaches to tradition- ally mind-numbing theoretical problems of literature, philoso- phy and history, and as the cre- ations of a systematic intelli- gence sensitive to its own intui- tions. The themes, which set out the issues and inquiries of cours- es Merleau-Ponty taught, are driven by the philosopher's phe- nomenological method but do not cohere as rigorous works of complete analysis They are most remarkable for the intel- lectual grace and delicacy with which their author identifies and formulates his points for study. Much of this grace is possible because Merleau - Ponty feels bodies of thought, including his own tradition, bring themselves into their own fullness and have as their task their own exami- nation. Theories for him develop by confronting themselves, and no ideas merit special, prefer- red status outside such inquiry. As he wrote in "Philosophy as Interrogation," Driven to self-examination by the irrationalism of their times, as well as by the in- trinsic evolution of their problems, philosophers have arrived at a definition of philosophy as the interro- gation of its very own mean- ing and possibility. (p. 105) A metaphysical theory for Merleau-Ponty is like a poem, formulated in a momentum of experimental conditions and shaping the possibilities of the future and the significance of the past. In the face of the awareness of unexplainable brute Being, no metaphysical theory deserves a place outside the history of metaphysics as somehow possibly ultimately true. Rather, the theory is writ- ten in what amounts to an in- tellectual genre, and it would be as senseless to identify a perfect metaphysic as a perfect sonnet. For as one would not seek a "last" sonnet, one would not hope for a final philosophy which presumes to answer all the questions and end all in- vestigation. Merleau-Ponty's concern for theories as unpretentious arti- fices and his tolerance of philo- sophy as a necessarily contin- uing investigation serves to free his curiosity. Throughout his themes, he is eager to see what philosophies can be form- ulated from various styles of systematic thought, and part of his effort is to develop such philosophies himself. In one of his courses he suggested onto- logies which would be based on contemporary developments in physics; in another, he embod- ied new theories of life sciences. particularly embryology, into epistemology. Generally he re- cognizes how heavily the modes of scientific thought shape and finally are restricted by philo- sophy: Applied science uncovers bodies of fact without ever achieving any radical self- expression, because it takes for granted traditional on- tologies and never directly confronts the problem of being. But the transforma- tions which it undergoes are full of philosophical signi- ficance. We shall attempt to develop these perspec- tives, to tie together the se- parate threads and to ex- pose the "teleology behind their progression (91). Finally, Merleau-Ponty believes that the assumptions of modern philosophy despite their scien- tific affirmations are only as enduring as those of modern scientific method - and at the time of his courses he felt "the common stock of scientists . . . continue to bring their own achievements within (modern philosophy's) jurisdiction until the quite un-Cartesian develop- ments in contemporary science open up for them a new onto- logy." (69) The same volubility that Mer- leau-Ponty stresses in philoso- phy is stressed as a central as- pect of other forms of thought. He believes that what's most in- teresting about the poetic use of language is not the problem of how fixed terms are applied for imitative or expressive purposes but rather how the poet creates fresh language for all language uses in 'the process of his crea- tivity: For the most part the the- ory of language confines it- s e 1 f to so-called exact forms, that is to say, to ob- servations about thoughts that have already matured in the person speaking and are at' least immanent in the person listening. The re- sult is that such theory los- es sight of the heuristic value of language, how it works to gain mastery - which on the contrary, is clearly seen in the writer at work. Perhaps constituted language should be regard- ed as a secondary form de- rived from the initial oper- ation which establishes a new signification in a lin- guistic apparatus construc- ted with old signs and thus able only to indicate the new meaning or draw the reader and the author him- self toward it (12). Similarly, in refining the con- cept of history, Merleau-Ponty works through the research of George Lukacs and Max Weber for a view that history is brought into being by the historical mind "reading" the past virtually in- to a comprehending future which it creates itself: History is there . . . where there is a historical percep- tion which, like perception in general, leaves in the background what cannot enter into the foreground but seizes the lines of force as they are generated and actively leads their traces to a conclusion . . . Know- ledge is gained by putting ourselves in the positions of those who have acted; it is action in the realm of the imagination . . . Like the touch of a sleepwalker, it touches in things only what they have in them that be- long to the future (29). Today's Writers ..,, Richard Wilson, a graduate student in American Studies, is in the beginning stages of a doctoral dissertation on Archi- tect Charles Follen McKim. Neal Bruss is a teaching fel- low in the English Department with strong interests in philo- sophy. ?au-Ponty So Merleau - Ponty handles concepts as unstable stuff whose significance is by no means easy to read. This demands a care in handling intellectual tradition which conventional historical approaches lack. In his courses on "The Concept of Nature." Merleau-Ponty avoids merely constructing a history of the concept of nature. Rather, he formulates t h e conceptions which very particularly, "right- ly or wrongly, still overhangs contemporary ideas about na- ture (67)." Such sensitivity is all the more remarkable in that it operates not merely in essays but in the principles guiding Merleau-Ponty's courses. For after all else, Themes from Lec- tures is evidence of the liveli- ness and selectivity of those courses, how a phenomenolo- gist used his method to locate what was most vital and most at issue. This education is to- tally removed from that which takes the philosophic compre- hensiveness andsvalues of ideas to be fixed and their aim the final answering of abstract questions. Merleau-Panty's tea- ching method, in fact, gives the Themes a significance xhich over-rides the fact that his the- ory of history is more signifi- cantly stated in an explanation of Stalinist violence in Human- ism and Terror and that Shel- ley and some modern linguists anticipated his theory of lan- guage. Even the phenomenologi- cal analysis of speech and sleep are not striking in their origi- nality. Rather, Themes from Lectures should be taken as the evidence of a sensitive .,yste- matic mind at its everyday work, which must have included some very remarkable teaching. b 0 0 k S W. Hawkins BUILDINGS O Wayne State U $15.00. Detroit Institut LEGACY OF A Detroit Institute By RCHARD C Traditionally ar tory has been c fined discourse,, for the cultured. years the concen ly outstanding bu uments and th them outside ofs has been -challen older system bui architects. verna ture (buildings1 tects) and qu (industrial / engi tecture) was oft ered a proper fie sential element building's relatio its function, its owner, the surro ment, or the soc: background was vant. The books ation are examp paths being hew wilderness of b The Buildings o Hawkins Ferry i analyze the bu: troit, to see the buildings of eac they have mold have given form Legacy of Albe brief survey of largely created a the modern Indu subject long ove chitectural histo tions in the field The average p daily contact wit] tecture: his life formed by buildi local architects men who have li interest in creat monument. The Detroit is conce aspect, with the buildings of alls styles that make commercial city. few in depth his buildings from a has been written States. Detroit is not n of as a notable tecture, or, in amenities to the However, Detroi some significan cated amidst the lined with gari miles of dreary b the gigantic ca has performed 430 individual b tured) some sen tectural develop erican city can1 sically a listing, critical focus evd is to comment building, adding ildings whic the style, the clients, and the F erry, THE period. It is an ambitious at- F DETROIT, tempt by Ferry and could lead niversity Press, to a new interest in a city's building environment. LBERrT KAHN, Ferry's concern is devoted al- of Arts, K5.00. most exclusively to architec- turally designed buildings: those GUY WILSON that architects will allow their names to be associated with. The chitectural his- suburban subdivision, the acres onsidered a re- of old developments, and the a subject only snall shops have been virtually But in recent ignored. The fact is that the tration on sole- standard landscape of the Unit- ildings or mon- ed States is not shown. A real- e isolation of istic view of the American space and time landscape must range from ged. Under the Charles Sheeler's "Classic Land- ldings by lesser scape" to Woodward Avenue and cular architec- "Jiffy Built Houses." These an- without archi- onymously designed vistas are asi-architecture just as important as the "indus- neering archi- trial Versailles" (General Mo- en not consid- tors Technical Center) at'War- ld of study. Es- ren, Michigan or Lafayette Tow- s such as a ers in downtown Detroit. Grosse n to its plan, Point Mansions are of interest, construction, its but just as vital is the develop- unding environ- ment of American Vernacular ial and cultural architecture, not only old barns claimed irrele- or grain elevators but supermar- under consider- kets, French Provincial homes, es of some new and hamburger stands. vn in the vast The problem is to treat the uilding history. city as a whole, as a collage of f Detroit by W. diverse elements that in one way s an attempt to or another come together to ildings of Del create the urban landscape. Fer- relationship of ry does make brief sounds in h era and how this direction. He notes movie ed a city and theaters, freeways, the huge to its life. The shopping center, and urban re- rt Kahn is a newal, but more information the man who and study is needed. These criti- nd gave form to cisms should not detract from strial factory, a the importance of Ferry's book. rlooked by ar- It is one of the few attempts to rians and one analyze the confused clutter of ajor contribu- buildings in a large United 4 of architecture. States city. erson has little Albert Kahn is an enigma in h "great" archi- American architectural history. is molded and A highly talented factory archi- ngs designed by tect, he gave shape and form to and - builders, the massive industrial complex little chance or (e.g. River Rouge, Willow Run, ing the "great" Chrysler) while as a domestic Buildings of and commercial architect he rned with this was closely tied to revivalism. vast number of Kahn regularized and ,organ- sizes, types and ized the American factory on a up the modern scale never before imagined, he It is one of the modernized the factory and took tories of a city's it out of the era of sweat shops all periods that and downtown lofts: River in the United Rouge became an American id- iom. But with the commercial ormally thought buildings he designed (largely city for archi- in Detroit) and the mansions he fact, for many eye or psyche. constructed in Grosse Point, he t dop. centain was a close follower of the dif- h surro ferent fads prevalent in the pe- riod 1900-1940. Always a technically ad- vanced architect,=Kahn clothed his commercial office buildings in facades of dubious merit. He seemed to feel the necessity of adding ornament to buildingsr other than his factories, but the1 quality of his ornament seems thin beside that of his contem- poraries. Kahn's ornament was often only skin deep, as seen in the University of Michigan's Natural Science building which is basically a modular factory design clothed in Italian red brick and terra cotta. Kahn often seems to have in- adequately synthesized a build- ing's function with the style or ornamental motif he was ap- plying to it, as can be seen in either his Angell Hall or the Fisher Building in Detroit. Per- haps his most successful build- ing, other than factories, and the one for which he wished to be remembered, is the Clem- ents Library, there the Ren- aissance style evokes both the mood and the function of the building convincingly. The Legacy of Albert Kahn is the catalogue of the current ex- higition on Kahn at the Detroit ,Institute of Arts (through No- vember 1, 1970). The catalogue contains all the exhibit's photo- graphs (in better reproduction than the exhibition), some plans, an essay by W. Hawkins Ferry on the Kahn firm's work through his death in 1942, and an essay by Walter B. Sanders on the successor firm of Albert Kahn Associates (a recent work of which is the General Library Wing). Unfortunately, neither essay is incisive or critical and und us the man Kahn remains largely a puzzle. One can gain a better impression of Kahn by reading the Sunday comic strip "Rags to Riches" stories dealing with Kahn from papers of the 30's and 40's at the exhibit. The most prominent industrial ar- chitect in the United States, Kahn's firm was huge, with an office staff of 400 in the 1930's Inevitably a large number of the commissions became office work, but the degree of his own per- sonal involvement other than organization can only be guessed at through these accounts. Whether we live near a Kahn building or not, his imprint has shaped some portion of our lift. From developing the assembly line with Henry Ford to helping Soviet Russia build over 300 factories, Kahn's influence has been more than that of a design- er of buildings. A man of talent, he has not yet been properly as- sessed. His style of architecture is either out of fashion (revival- ism) or not architecture in the eyes of many critics, yet his Dodge Half-Ton Plant in War- ren is perhaps one of the most influential buildings in the Unit- ed States. The fact that the architec- ture of Albert Kann or that of the city of Detroit is even un- der consideration shows a new awareness of the elements that make up the environment where we spend most of our lives. The multi-dimensions of architec- ture have to be studied-from the auto show rooms on Michi- gan Avenue to the monuments of Yamaski-as aspects of the en- vironment that can be shaped and perhaps controlled. FRESH APPLE CIDER 79c a Gallon WITH THIS COUPON Convenient Food Mart 1757 PLYMOUTH RD. (next to Lums) t buildings lo- "endless streets sh shapes and uildings." From 'taloging Ferry (approximately uildings are pic- se of the archi- nent of an Am- be gained. Ba- there is little ent. The scheme briefly on a background on 'I Are you Still reading the way your, parents read? In the first grade, when you were taught to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second grade, you were asked to read silently. But you couldn't do it. You stopped reading out loud, but you continued to say every word to yourself. Chances are, you're doing it right now. This means that you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast- est speech on record: 327 words per minute.) The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you to read without mentally saying each word to yourself. Instead of reading one word at a time, you'll learn to read groups of words. To see how natural this is, look at the dot over the line in bold type. grass is green You immediately see all three words. Now look at the dot between the next two lines of type. and it grows .0 when it rains With training, you'll learn to use your innate ability to see groups of words. As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be able to read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute . . . depending on the difficulty of the material. At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's American Political Tradition and finish each chapter in 11 minutes. At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read a magazine like Time or News- Chrysler Corporation-Half-ton Truck Plant martha graham dance cc week and finish each page in 31 seconds. At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read the 447 page novel- The God- father in 1 hour and 4 minutes. These are documented statistics based on the results of the 450,000 people who' have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course since its inception in 1959. The course isn't complicated. There are no machines. There are no notes to take. And you don't have to memorize any- thing, 95% of our graduates have improved their reading ability by an average of 4.7 times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read- ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times. In these instances, the tuition is completely refunded. Take a free Mini-Lesson on Evelyn Wood. Do you want to see how the course works? Then take a free Mini-Lesson.TM The Mini-Lesson is'an hour long peek at what the Evelyn Wood course offers. We'll show you how it's possible to accelerate your speed without skipping a single word. You'll have a chance to try your hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually increase your reading speed. (You'll only increase it a little, but it's a start.) We'll show you how we can extend your memory. And we'll show you how we make chapter outlining obsolete. Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a wild hour. And it's free. "One of the finest, greatest, noblest dance companies ever known to man." CLIVE BARNES, New York Times impany WILL BE PRESENTED BY IN HILL AUDITORIUM MONDAY, OCT. 26, 8:30 PROGRAM: El Penitente (music by Louis Horst) p i... - - MINAI-LESSON SCHEDULE UNIVERSITY OF MICH. STIWNT UNION WED. OCT. 21 6 P.M. THURS. OCT. 22 6 P.M. I I i i i _.l n