"I am not one who was born in the custody of wisdom. I am one who is fond of olden times and intense in quest of the sacred knowing of the ancients." Gustave Courbet

08 February 2020

Completion.


The natural world has always offered itself as a screen for human projection. The Romantics called this the pathetic fallacy. Ralph Waldo Emerson called it "intercourse with heaven and Earth." We project our fears and longings onto everything we’re not—every beast, ever mountain—and in this way we make them somehow kin.  It’s an act of act of humbling and longing and claiming all at once. Often, we’re not even aware that we’re doing it. Decades after amateur astronomer Percival Lowell claimed to have seen canals on Mars and shadowy "spokes" on Venus, interpreting both as signs of alien life, an optometrist figured out that the settings on Lowell’s telescope—its magnification and narrow aperture—meant that it was essentially projection the interior of his eye onto the planets he was observing. The spokes of Venus were the shadows of his blood vessels, swollen from hypertension. He wasn’t seeing other life; he was seeing the imprint of his own gaze.

When Emerson claimed that "every appearance in nature corresponds to some state of mind," he understood this correspondence as a kind of completion.

Leslie Jamison

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