Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Note on Editions and Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: Individualism and the ‘aesthetic philosopher’
- 2 Empiricism and the Imperilled Self
- 3 Subjectivity and Imagination: From Hume to Kant via Berkeley
- 4 Metaphysics: Pater's Failed Attempt at Atheism
- 5 Sense and Sensuality: Caught between Venus and Dionysus
- 6 Pater's Copernican Revolution: The Desiring, Dying Body
- 7 Evolution and the ‘Species’: The Individual in Deep Time
- 8 The Moment and the Aesthetic Imagination
- 9 Ethics, Society and the Aesthetic Individual
- 10 Conclusion: ‘the elusive inscrutable mistakable self’
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Conclusion: ‘the elusive inscrutable mistakable self’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Note on Editions and Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: Individualism and the ‘aesthetic philosopher’
- 2 Empiricism and the Imperilled Self
- 3 Subjectivity and Imagination: From Hume to Kant via Berkeley
- 4 Metaphysics: Pater's Failed Attempt at Atheism
- 5 Sense and Sensuality: Caught between Venus and Dionysus
- 6 Pater's Copernican Revolution: The Desiring, Dying Body
- 7 Evolution and the ‘Species’: The Individual in Deep Time
- 8 The Moment and the Aesthetic Imagination
- 9 Ethics, Society and the Aesthetic Individual
- 10 Conclusion: ‘the elusive inscrutable mistakable self’
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In such of us as not merely, live, but think and feel what life is and might be, there is erected an inner drama full of conflicting emotions, long drawn out through the years, and, in many cases, never brought to a conclusion.
Vernon Lee, Gospels of Anarchy and Other Contemporary Studies (9)Vernon Lee might have had Walter Pater in mind as she wrote these lines. His meandering aesthetic philosophy, itself ‘never acquiescing in a facile orthodoxy’ (R 152), was on no account ever brought to a conclusion. And so, to write a conclusion about Pater is already to engage in an exercise quite foreign to the man himself.
The extent to which one may make conclusions about Pater's late- Romantic individual is limited to a notional sense of an ending, never to be confused with resolution. A feather on the breath of time is Pater's ever-shifting thought. His Prufrockian ‘visions and revisions’ understand themselves to be – like his idea of the late-Romantic individual – subject to ever-fluctuating time, even as he strives to overcome this limitation. It is with these qualifications that Pater has emerged in this study as a Romantic ‘aesthetic philosopher’, who engages in the history of modern philosophy in order to explore the ‘elusive inscrutable mistakable self’ (HP 23).
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- Information
- Walter PaterIndividualism and Aesthetic Philosophy, pp. 183 - 189Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2013