Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
Do I understand arights?: The elemental wine, of which Chauvet speaks, is similar to that elusive "real world" that we believe exists outside of us but, because our relationship to it is mediated by our senses, we are obliged to describe it only using the values that our senses deliver to us (e.g., this is longer than that, this is cold, this is green). The thrust is that we cannot say what anything is, only how it appears. This is idealism in a form originally established by George Berkeley ("esse est percipi").
One could spin off further into ontology and into epistemology at this point -- Nelson Goodman, anyone? -- but I'd rather backtrack to your comment about wine that we call barolo.
Only with time in wood does the wine become barolo. Until that time, the wine is a nebbiolo varietal (with potential). But is this just fiddling around with the title of the substance? Or, if language mediates all, is that all there is for us to do?
A foal is not a race-horse. But if his sire is, and if I raise him right, then he will be a race-horse. There is some race-horse-ness about him, even as a newborn.
One could spin off further into ontology and into epistemology at this point -- Nelson Goodman, anyone? -- but I'd rather backtrack to your comment about wine that we call barolo.
Only with time in wood does the wine become barolo. Until that time, the wine is a nebbiolo varietal (with potential). But is this just fiddling around with the title of the substance? Or, if language mediates all, is that all there is for us to do?
A foal is not a race-horse. But if his sire is, and if I raise him right, then he will be a race-horse. There is some race-horse-ness about him, even as a newborn.