What is it about?

Jean-Luc Marion’s phenomenology reveals two attitudes regarding the classification of phenomena. On the one hand, they are classified by type. On the other, the “banality of saturation” reduces these types to possible interpretations, in which case saturation isn’t a qualitative rupture anymore, but a possible hermeneutic attitude to any phenomenon. Hence, there is, in Marion’s phenomenology, a tension between a metaphysical attitude that maintains categorial discontinuities, and a hermeneutic temptation driven by the recovery of quantitative continuities between all phenomena. Yet, Marion does not push this quantitative temptation to its limits; he steps back in front of a specifically saturated phenomenon: the icon.

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Perspectives

Stéphane Vinolo is Senior Lecturer and Head of School of Philosophy at the Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador. His research interests include XVII century philosophy and French contemporary Philosophy.

Dr Stéphane sv Vinolo
Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador

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This page is a summary of: La tentation moderne de Jean-Luc Marion : le scandale de la saturation, Dialogue, June 2016, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s0012217316000469.
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