Philosophizing is a process of making sense out of experience, rather than adding to experience itself, as factual learning and experimental investig… - Susanne Langer

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Philosophizing is a process of making sense out of experience, rather than adding to experience itself, as factual learning and experimental investigation do.

English
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About Susanne Langer

Susanne Katherina Langer (20 December 1895 – 17 July 1985) was an American philosopher of art, remembered for her 1942 book Philosophy in a New Key.

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Susanne Knauth Susanne K. Langer Susanne K. née Knauth Susanne Katherina Langer Susanne Katherina née Knauth Susanne K. nee Knauth Susanne Katherina nee Knauth
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Additional quotes by Susanne Langer

In a work of art, however modest, the peculiar character of life is always reflected in the fact that it has no parts which keep their qualitative identity in isolation. In the simplest design, the virtual constituents are indivisible, and inalienable from the whole.

Probably the profoundest difference between human and animal needs is made by one piece of human awareness, one fact that is not present to animals, because it is never learned in any direct experience: that is our foreknowledge of death. The fact that we ourselves must die is not a simple and isolated fact. It is built on a wide survey of facts that discloses the structure of history as a succession of overlapping brief lives, the patterns of youth and age, growth and decline; and above all that, it is built on the logical insight that one’s own life is a case in point. Only a creature that can think symbolically about life can conceive of its own death. Our knowledge of death is part of our knowledge of life.

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The men in the laboratory [...] cannot be said to observe the actual objects of their curiosity at all.[...] The sense data on which the propositions of modern science rest are, for the most part, little photographic spots and blurs, or inky curved lines on paper.[...] What is directly observable is only a sign of the "physical fact"; it requires interpretation to yield scientific propositions.

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