Open Philosophy (Feb 2020)

Walter Benjamin’s First Philosophy: Towards a Constellational Definition of Experience

  • Ross Nathan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/opphil-2020-0006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 81 – 101

Abstract

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This essay argues for the philosophical standing of Walter Benjamin’s early work and posits a deeper continuity between this early work as a philosopher and the subsequent development of his work as a writer. When these fragments are read in proper relation to each other, they reveal for the first time many of the key innovations of Benjamin as a philosopher, as well as his points of influence on Horkheimer and Adorno. His early ‘Program’ critiques the Enlightenment conception of experience as a means for gaining empirical knowledge, and announces the need for a new concept of experience. Benjamin follows through on this program with a method of philosophical enquiry that is by turns fragmentary and constellational, developing a series of provisional notions of experience, which form a constellation with one another: perception, mimesis, language as a medium of experience, observation and memory.

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