Reading and Performing: Interpreting Reality According to Simone Weil and Luigi Pareyson
Abstract
1. Introduction
[Dieu] aime cette perspective de la création qu’on ne peut avoir que du point de vue où je suis
Ogni persona è una singolarissima prospettiva sulla realtà: porta con sé una chiave per interpretare il mondo, propria a lei sola, diversa da tutte le altre
2. Simone Weil’s Lecture
2.1. Reading and Action: Powers and Limits
I have a certain power over the universe, which allows me to change appearances, but indirectly, through work, not through a simple wish. […] This power is limited by the limits of my physical strength. I may also have the power to change the meanings I read in appearances and which impose themselves on me; but this power is also limited, indirect and exercised through work
2.2. Elevation of Reading: Attention, Beauty and Malheur
A man tempted to appropriate a deposit will not refrain from doing so simply because he has read the Critique of Practical Reason; he will refrain from doing so, perhaps even, it will seem to him, in spite of himself, if the very appearance of the deposit seems to cry out to him that it must be returned. Everyone has experienced similar states, where it seems that one would like to do wrong, but cannot”.
2.3. Levels of Reading
2.3.1. First Level: Reading the Necessity Behind Sensation
2.3.2. Second Level: Reading the Order Behind Necessity
2.3.3. The Level of Non-Reading: Reading God Behind Order
To think of a true text that I do not read, that I have never read, is to think of a reader of that true text, that is, God; but immediately a contradiction appears, because I cannot apply this notion of reading to the being I conceive when I speak of God. Moreover, even if I could, this would not allow me to order the texts that I read according to a hierarchy of value.
2.4. True Reading and Divine Mediation
Every time a man rises to a degree of excellence that makes him, by participation, a divine being, something impersonal and anonymous appears in him. His voice is enveloped in silence. This is evident in the great works of art and thought, in the great deeds of saints and in their words.
3. Reading as Performance in Luigi Pareyson’s Aesthetic Reflection
3.1. Form, Reading and Artistic Performance
The work is the same, and remains unchanged in its perennity, giving rise to infinite interpretations in readers and suggesting infinite ideas in artists, so that in this sense it can be said that the source is unique, without the ideas being the same, because in front of that work, which remains one and the same, the reactions have been different, and the starting point for new formations has also been different.
3.2. Matter and Formativity
Therefore, only something that has physical reality and material existence can hope to be pure form, that is, form and nothing else, i.e., a work of art: to make a work of art, that is, a form that is nothing but form, means to make a physical and material object, as is evident from the fact that there is no art that is not practiced by adopting a physical matter, such as words, which are sound as well as meaning, sounds, colours, marble and stones, and the human body itself, as in mime or dance
The formative intention arises only when it seeks and demands, indeed chooses and adopts its matter, and tends to take shape in that very specific matter, which can only be its own; and the matter enters the artistic process only insofar as it places its own nature at the disposal of the formative intention, that is, only insofar as its characteristics are given a formal vocation. […] The conformity and adaptability of the matter to the formative intention is certainly established by the latter, but in such a way as to prolong the very nature of the matter in some way. The artist adopts the matter in order to tame it and make it his own, but he succeeds only if he ensures that it almost comes to meet him”.
3.3. Self-Availability and an Attentive Regard for Beauty
3.4. “Everything Is Form”: Relational Foundation, Exemplarity and Artistic Mediation
There is no confusion of values, and one can speak of the beauty of the good and the true, indeed of goodness and truth as beauty, that is, one can extend art to every activity and beauty to every work […]. In this formativeness common to all aspects of spiritual life lies the necessarily “artistic” side of every human operation.
[…] recognizing and making the work of art recognized as such. This is possible if the emphasis on one aspect, both in the reading and in the work, is not at the expense of the others, but implicitly contains them all by means of internal and perhaps hidden references; because the process of reading as an execution that is both interpretation and judgement, is indivisible, and only in its indivisibility does it become recognition of the work, and the total unity of the work is indissoluble(Pareyson 2010, p. 272, our italics).
3.5. Singularity and Universality of Form: Art as a Way to God
[…] the relations that the parts have with each other do nothing but reflect the link that each part has with the whole: the harmony of the parts forms the whole because the whole establishes their unity. If the parts constitute and delineate the whole, and therefore the whole results from the parts and contains them, this is because the whole demands and disposes the parts, and therefore each part contains and evokes the whole(Pareyson 2010, p. 107, our italics).
for works of art, however possible and necessary their reading, execution and interpretation may be—and however clear the purely human activity that created them—, always have something mysterious about them, and it would be a rough and crude reader who allowed himself to miss this aura of mystery that surrounds them and unites them with the unfathomable depths of nature”.
4. Weil and Pareyson, Beyond Comparison: Horizons of a Relational and Embodied Thinking; A Challenge for Our Time
4.1. Relational Foundation
4.2. Beauty and Aesthetics as a Privileged Way to Access the Secrets of Being
4.3. Contemplating in Order to Act and Acting While Contemplating
4.4. Correlation Between Thought and Art
4.5. The Link Between Particularity, Universality and the Relationship with the o/Other
4.6. Suffering and Malheur: An Originality of Weil’s Thought
4.7. Shared Vocabulary and Suggestions for Further Study
4.8. A Valuable Legacy for Current Philosophical Concerns: Final Pro-Vocations
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | For further insight into the context and developments of Pareyson’s studies in aesthetics, see (Blanco Sarto 2002, 40 ff). |
| 2 | As there is still no accurate critical translation of the complete works of Simone Weil and Luigi Pareyson into English, in this study we have chosen to use the bibliography of their writings published in their original languages (French and Italian, respectively), which have been translated in their entirety by us. For the sake of stylistic and linguistic consistency, we have also translated the quotations from non-English critical literature. Among Weil’s works translated into English, even if only partially, we would like to mention: The Need for Roots. London: Routledge (Weil 2002b); Waiting for God. New York: HarperPerennial (Weil 2009b); First and Last Notebooks: Supernatural Knowledge. Eugene: Wipf & Stock (Weil 2015a); Simone Weil: Late Philosophical Writings. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press (Weil 2015b). The only works by Pareyson translated into English are: the collection Existence, Interpretation, Freedom: Selected Writings. Aurora: The Davies Group (Pareyson 2009); and Truth and Interpretation. Albany: State University of New York Press (Pareyson 2013). |
| 3 | As Weilian scholarship generally acknowledges, despite her premature death, Simone Weil’s intellectual journey is clearly divided into three distinct periods. The first coincides with her formative years at the Lycée Henri IV and at the École Normale de Paris (1925–1930). The second is particularly marked by her teaching activity in different places, her social and trade union commitment, her experience in the factory, and her first approaches to Christianity (1931–1937). Finally, the third period, in which her intellectual production—while continuing to retain its customary critical stance on the social and political level—takes on, as we shall see, a markedly religious-Christological and even mystical register (1938–1943). This, in our opinion, represents the mature phase of Weil’s thought, developed especially during the Second World War and throughout her exile, during which she died in London on 24 August 1943. A brief excursus on these years, albeit with a slightly different chronology from the one adopted here, is offered by Miklos Vetö in La métaphysique religieuse de Simone Weil (Vetö 2014, pp. 16–20). |
| 4 | Cf. (Chenavier 2001, p. 520). For a comprehensive and unified reading of Weil’s thought, we suggest also: (Gabellieri 2003). |
| 5 | Cf. (Trabucco 1997, p. 194). Rolf Kühn, in turn, defines it as a “reflective and hermeneutic phenomenology”, in which both the idea of the subject as giver of meaning and legislator of the world, and the admission of the existence of meaning in reality itself are present (cf. Kühn 1980, vol. 64, no. 4). Kühn’s most authoritative work on this subject remains his doctoral thesis entitled Lecture décréative: une synthèse de la pensée de Simone Weil. Paris: Sorbonne (Kühn 1985); German translation: Deuten als Entwerden: eine Synthese des Werkes Simone Weils in hermeneutisch-religionsphilosophischer Sicht. Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder (Kühn 1989). |
| 6 | This does not, however, detract from the novelty underlying the term lecture, since, as Christine Vogel points out, “the notion of lecture that Simone Weil elaborates has nothing to do with reading in the ordinary sense of the term”, for which “she therefore makes us understand that she takes the term ‘reading’ in an unprecedented, entirely new sense” (Vogel 2010, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 202, 206). |
| 7 | On this point, see (Springsted 1985, vol. 17, no. 2). |
| 8 | “For what we call the world are meanings that we read; it is therefore not real. But it seizes us from outside; therefore, it is real. Why resolve this contradiction, when the highest task of thought on this earth is to define and contemplate insoluble contradictions, which, as Plato said, pull us upwards?” (Weil 2008, pp. 74–75). |
| 9 | A graphic representation of this gap between reading and the meaning of what is read is that of the slave in Plato’s cave—who, incidentally, does not even know he is a slave—and, having no broader perspective of what he sees (his chains prevent him from turning his head), confuses reality with its shadows. In this sense, Simone Weil argues in Formes de l’amour implicite de Dieu that we all live in unreality (cf. Weil 2008, p. 300). That is because we are all inside the cave, so we all need the intervention of grace to get out (cf. infra points 2.3.3 and 2.4). |
| 10 | The theme of work is not only central to Weil’s notion of reading, but also to her entire philosophical approach. On this important Weilian topic, see (Chenavier 2001); (Gabellieri 2017). |
| 11 | |
| 12 | The misuse of force by human beings is also the result of a misreading of reality, caused by an excessive personal desire to adapt it to one’s own point of view. On this theme, see “Simone Weil’s Iliad: The power of words” (Hammer and Kicey 2010, vol. 72, n. 1). |
| 13 | Since man is outside absolute good and truth, every human action and word is inevitably mixed with relative good and evil. This is why Weil states: “Who can presume to read correctly? That is why we must implore the truth” (Weil 1997, p. 273). |
| 14 | This “being fully present” where one is, which Simone Weil links to her notion of lecture, and which—en passant—literally translates the existentialists term Dasein (“Relationship between my concept of reading and the existentialists’ ‘Dasein’” (Weil 1997, p. 288; see also Weil 1997, p. 294), is an indispensable condition for fully recognizing what is before us and, on this basis, experiencing the superabundance of existence, whose infallible sign is pure joy (cf. Weil 1997, pp. 256, 319). Weil explains this in her notebook (cahier) no. 8: “If I looked at my future self as another being who is foreign to me […] I would have no concern for what will happen. This is detachment with regard to the future. If I add to it detachment from the whole past (remission of debts), I will be detached from everything that is not the present. That is one of the conditions of the ‘state of childhood’, the ‘state of immortality’, ‘Dasein’ (Rilke)” (Weil 2002a, p. 116). |
| 15 | Beauty and reflection on art are also essential in Weil’s entire philosophy, right from her early school writings, as is the case with the 1926 work Le Beau et le Bien (Weil 1988, pp. 60–73). As we are unable to develop this aspect in detail, we refer to: The Beauty That Saves: Essays on Aesthetics and Language in Simone Weil. Georgia: Mercer University Press (Dunaway and Springsted 1996); Estetica ed esistenza. Deleuze, Derida, Foucault, Weil. Milan: Franco Angeli (Lorenzetti and Zani 2001); “‘La percossa del bello’. La bellezza come discesa e ascesa in Simone Weil” (Marianelli 2010, vol 2, no. 2); “L’esthétique de Simone Weil. La terre et le ciel : une double origine de l’œuvre d’art”. Paris: Éditions de L’Herne (Zyka 2014); “La clef des vérités surnaturelles. Simone Weil et l’esthétique” (Negri 2020, vol. 13, no. 2). |
| 16 | This idea of example and testimony as reflections of beauty, in our opinion, is very close to the concept of “exemplarity” developed by Luigi Pareyson in his studies on art (cf. infra points 3.1, 3.4). |
| 17 | Along the same lines, Weil argues in Enracinement (1943) that it is urgent for the people of her time to “get used to the truth”. In light of this, what is needed first and foremost is a spiritual and intellectual education, entrusted to teachers who are consistent and capable of transmitting to others a love for truth. Because “there is no possibility of satisfying a people’s need for truth unless there are men who love truth” (Weil 2013, p. 142). According to Weil, this truth is found primarily in religion, due to an “eternal hierarchy”. Sure proof of this is the beauty that shines through all the great sacred texts (cf. Weil 2013, p. 347). |
| 18 | The four forms of God’s implicit love in this world are: love for one’s neighbour, love for order or beauty in the world, love for religious practices or religion, and friendship (cf. Weil 2008, pp. 285–336). |
| 19 | To help us understand what Weil means by substance, it is worth quoting what she writes in a passage from Cahiers about the real, and not purely symbolic, presence of God in the Eucharist: “Substance: it is that which is an object not for the senses (accidents). Not for the understanding (substance). But for love. A symbol does not bring about transformation, does not make one cross a boundary or pass through a door. A symbol is in the soul, and something outside the soul is needed to pull it out” (Weil 1997, p. 450). |
| 20 | Beauty and malheur are, in fact, the two privileged ways to reach what Weil calls “the passage to the limit”, that is, to the transcendent (cf. “Lettre à Joë Bousquet”, Weil 1962, pp. 73–84). On this, see (Thomas 2025, vol. 63, no. 3). |
| 21 | In this sense, we agree with Calò when he states that Weil’s reading is “more than a phenomenology”, since “it is a search for greater visibility of the real, condensed into the most essential characteristics of the real itself. […] In this visibility, the role of the perceiving self is eliminated as much as possible and the negative character of the progressive search is privileged” (Calò 1996, pp. 26, 77). |
| 22 | Achieving a correct reading of the world is therefore fundamental for Simone Weil, because only from this can good and just action arise, essentially different from that guided by the ego and force: “We always read in the world an action to be performed […]. It is a question of achieving a true reading” (Weil 1997, p. 311). On this, see (Chenavier 2012, n. 387, août-sept.). It is interesting to note how Weil here associates her concept of lecture with “une action à accomplir”, that is, with a “performance” or “execution”, which is precisely the sense that Pareyson too will attribute to his idea of lettura in the aesthetic field, as we shall see in the second part of our study. |
| 23 | As we shall see, attention, as a tool for elevation, is also a condition of openness and transition to grace (cf. infra point 2.3.3). |
| 24 | It is worth noting that these three levels, although not explicitly developed as such in the Essai, are implicitly mentioned. They are, however, frequently cited and developed in various passages of the Cahiers. |
| 25 | In this vein, already in her philosophy lectures in Roanne during the academic year 1933–1934, Weil argued that “we are conscious of what we believe we see, and not of what we actually see; of what we believe we touch, and not of what we actually touch, and so on. Sensation merely serves as an occasion to become conscious of what we believe we feel” (Weil 1959, p. 45). |
| 26 | In fact: “Reading. An irreducible part of sensitivity” (Weil 1997, p. 315). It is true that Simone Weil also speaks in her Cahiers of the need for a “liberation of the body” (cf. Weil 1994, p. 294), but by this expression she does not mean to renounce the singularity of the human body, but rather to make it not an absolute, instead a “blind man’s stick” that “extends” to the entire universe through—as we shall see—the loss of perspective (cf. Weil 1994, p. 410). |
| 27 | Mathematics is, for Weil, a clear example of a pure reading of necessity, since it allows us to harmoniously unite and connect different phenomena, thus succeeding not only in overcoming sensible appearances, but also in understanding and dissolving certain contradictions that present themselves to the intellect (cf. Weil 2002a, pp. 404, 406). |
| 28 | As Marianelli points out, this is a mysterious correlation that the human intellect is able to observe in the order of things, but not to resolve, because “it is unable to establish the origin of the order itself” (Marianelli 2004, p. 210). |
| 29 | According to Marianelli, intuition and discursiveness coexist in Weil’s thought (cf. Marianelli 2004, p. 233). In this context, Weil links her final level of interpretation to Spinoza’s third kind of knowledge, or intuitive science (cf. Weil 1994, pp. 294, 411). |
| 30 | To arrive at this, faith (πίστις)—a typical expression of love—is fundamental for Weil, as a “gift of reading” (Weil 1997, p. 317): “by definition, one cannot perceive the supernatural where one does not direct the gaze of faith” (Weil 1997, p. 469). For the philosopher, in fact, in the realm of the supernatural, faith possesses a “precision that is more than mathematical” (cf. Weil 1997, pp. 338, 316, 318). In this regard, Gabellieri states: “Passing from one level of reality to another therefore presupposes that perception and reason, as capacities for grasping reality, are oriented and animated by a faith in what cannot be grasped” (Gabellieri 2019a, p. 215). The author explains that this faith has nothing to do with religious confession, but is typically philosophical, since every intellectual search for truth requires, in some way, adherence to something that is partly evident and partly implicit and hidden. |
| 31 | In fact, attention is itself grace because, it is not human beings, with their intelligence, who elevate themselves towards the supernatural and unintelligible, but rather the supernatural that descends (first movement of grace) and reveals itself to attentive souls, elevating them (second movement of grace): “Grace is a mystery as great as the Incarnation. […] Incarnation. A descending movement as a condition for an ascending movement” (Weil 1997, p. 318). |
| 32 | Reading God in every manifestation of reality ultimately means “loving all facts” (or amor fati), that is, loving every part of the universe and every event as it presents itself (cf. Weil 1997, pp. 342, 373). |
| 33 | The cubic box with infinite faces is another image that Simone Weil uses to graphically represent the idea of that which has no form or the “true text” that no human being has ever read and will ever read (cf. Weil 2006a, p. 414). Simone Weil explains this in her Intuitions pré- chrétiennes (1942): “In any comparison of this kind, which seems to dissolve the reality of the universe in favour of God, there is a danger of pantheistic error. But the analysis of the perception of a cubic box provides a perfect metaphor in this regard, prepared for us by God. There is no point of view from which the box appears to be a cube; only a few faces are ever seen, the angles do not appear to be right, the sides do not appear to be equal. No one has ever seen, nor will anyone ever see, a cube. Nor has anyone ever touched, nor will anyone ever touch, a cube, for similar reasons. If we go around the box, we generate an indefinite variety of apparent shapes. The cubic shape is none of them. It is other than all of them, external to all of them, transcendent to their domain. At the same time, it constitutes their unity. It also constitutes their truth” (Weil 2009a, p. 291; cf. Weil 2002a, p. 183). |
| 34 | As an event ab aeterno, the divine incarnation is already realised in creation and finds its fulfilment in the event of the Passion. |
| 35 | Metaxy (μεταξύ) means mediator, a term that Weil takes up in particular from Plato and which, as Gabellieri well explains, appears for the first time in her Marseille writings, practically at the same time as lecture (cf. Gabellieri 2019a, p. 158). |
| 36 | In this vein, Weil notes shortly after leaving Marseille: “Christ is the key that locks together the Creator and creation. Knowledge being the reflection of being, Christ is also, by the same token, the key to knowledge. ‘Woe to you, doctors of the law,’ he said, ‘you have taken away the key to knowledge.’ That key was himself, whom the centuries before him had loved in advance, and whom the Pharisees had denied and were going to put to death” (Weil 2009a, p. 288); “There is a supernatural reason. It is knowledge, gnosis, γνώσις, of which Christ was the key, the knowledge of the Truth whose breath is sent by the Father” Weil 2006a, p. 139). In Lettre à un religieux, Weil points out that her use of the term key (clef) is inspired by Pythagoras: “The Pythagoreans called ‘key’ the mediation between God and creation. They also called it harmony” (Weil 2019, p. 188). |
| 37 | On this, see in particular (Marianelli 2004, pp. 207, 266); (Gabellieri 2019a). |
| 38 | For an in-depth analysis of this topic, see (Putino 2006). |
| 39 | We can thus observe how, paradoxically, divine grace has always dwelt within us, while remaining transcendent with respect to our self. As we read in one of Weil’s last writings: “Grace is at once that which is most external to us and most internal. Good comes to us only from the outside, but only the good to which we consent penetrates us” (Théorie des Sacrements, Weil 2019, p. 343). In this sense, Krause’s interpretation of Weil’s notion of grace as an interaction and synergy between divine persuasion and human attention seems particularly apt. It is a persuasion that is not an arbitrary imposition, but rather a “poetic inspiration of the good”, recognised as such and freely embraced by the attentive soul. In this way, “the untenable view of an aut-aut, or of a partim-partim, between grace and freedom in the conversion of the human being is here overcome in favour of an inseparable and unmixed structure of act, in which both human attention and divine persuasive power are fully present in their respective acts, since in the event of conviction they cooperate as a genuine actus totus ab utroque (con-cursus instead of competition [Konkurrenz])” (Krause 2016, p. 116). |
| 40 | In this sense, Weil notes in her Cahiers: “[…] evil consists in action, good in non-action or non-agent action” (Weil 1997, p. 126). |
| 41 | “JOY (PURE JOY IS ALWAYS THE JOY OF BEAUTY) IS THE FEELING OF REALITY. BEAUTY IS THE MANIFEST PRESENCE OF REALITY. THIS AND NOTHING ELSE IS WHAT PLATO SAYS—τὸ ὄν” (Weil 1997, p. 485). |
| 42 | The impersonal has to do with a purely divine characteristic, understood as the ability to renounce one’s own person in order to allow the other to be: “It is therefore true in a sense that God must be conceived as impersonal, in the sense that He is the divine model of a person who surpasses himself by renouncing himself” (Weil 2008, p. 313). From this we understand why Christ, as grace incarnate, represents the human model of God’s impersonal reality: He is the one who completely renounces his divinity, submitting himself fully to necessity, that is, to the will of the Father; just as the Father had renounced his power over the world in favour of the necessity. This impersonal reality of God (Father and Son) is fully manifested in the event of the Passion: “The Father in heaven, who abandons his son and remains silent; Christ abandoned, nailed in silence; two impersonal divinities who reflect each other and make one God” (Weil 2006a, p. 172). On this point, see in particular the following contributions: “Creación y decreación en la filosofía de Simone Weil” (Estelrich Barceló 2007, vol. 63); “Dieu personnel, Dieu impersonnel, Dieu Trinitaire: Mystique et Christianisme chez S. Weil et J. Monchanin” (Gabellieri 1998, vol. 3, no. 2); “Animal et impersonnel: Sull’umano in Simone Weil” (Simeoni 2019, vol. 21, no. 2). |
| 43 | In the course of Luigi Pareyson’s prolific and abundant philosophical meditation, which spans over half a century, it is possible to outline “four phases” of his hermeneutic theory. According to Ciglia, on the one hand, there are three different formulations of the theory of interpretation provided by Pareyson himself: (a) that which develops within ontological personalism according to a clear existentialist inspiration (1938–1946); (b) subsequently, that elaborated in the theory of formativity (1946–1962)—Blanco Sarto situates this stage of Pareyson’s thought between the years 1945–1964 (Blanco Sarto 2002, p. 40), on which we will focus in particular; (c) finally, that which is properly interpretative of ontological hermeneutics (1962–1975) (on this, see the next footnote). (d) On the other hand, each of these formulations converges in Pareyson’s “last philosophy”, known as the ontology of freedom (1975–1991)—published posthumously and remaining unfinished—where the hermeneutics of myth and religious experience (already in nuce in his writings of the 1940s) is finally thematized in a definitive way (cf. Ciglia 1995). |
| 44 | Luigi Pareyson’s hermeneutic doctrine matured during the 1960s, and his fundamental theses found their full expression in the famous Verità e interpretazione, first published in 1971, a volume that collects and organises in an organic—though not necessarily chronological—manner his studies on the theory of interpretation, published between 1964 and 1970. It is well known, however—as attested not only by critics but by Pareyson himself in the introductory essay to the 1985 edition of Esistenza e Persona (cf. “Dal personalismo esistenziale all’ontologia della libertà” [Pareyson 1985])—that the beginnings of this original hermeneutic conception can already be traced back to the dawn of his intellectual journey (the second half of the 1930s and early 1940s), gradually taking shape and developing over the decades, until it reached new forms and expressions in the last season of his thought, which extended, roughly speaking, from 1975 until his death in 1991. For further information on the hermeneutic path of Pareyson’s philosophy, in addition to the aforementioned book by Ciglia, see: “An Introduction to the Hermeneutics of Luigi Pareyson” (Carravetta 1989, vol. 3, no. 4); “La teoria dell’interpretazione nel pensiero di Luigi Pareyson: un’ermeneutica ontologicamente orientata” (Corbetta 1998, vol. 90, n. 3); “Las principales cuestiones hermenéuticas de Luigi Pareyson.” (Giménez-Salinas 2013, vol. 16, no. 1); Thinking the Inexhaustible: Art, Interpretation, and Freedom in the Philosophy of Luigi Pareyson. Albany: State University of New York Press (Benso and Schroeder 2018); “Interpretation from the Ground: Luigi Pareyson’s Hermeneutics of Inexhaustibility and Its Implications for Moral Ontology” (Harmon 2017, vol. 10, no. 1). |
| 45 | On this subject, see the detailed account of the origin and development of the concept of aesthetics and the philosophy of art provided by Maurizio Ferraris in the afterword to Estetica: (Ferraris 2010, pp. 333–89). |
| 46 | On the importance and originality of Estetica in the context in which it arose, it is worth quoting Carravetta’s words: “First published in 1954 after studies on existentialism, Jaspers and German idealism, Luigi Pareyson’s Estetica: teoria della formatività is the third and last (after Croce’s and Gentile’s) of the great books on aesthetics written in this century in Italy, coming out at a time when this genre seemed to have outlived its reason for being. The importance of this work rests on its being the first, at least in the Italian panorama, to deal with the being of the interpreter and the being of art, setting them in relation by means of interpretation itself, and describing the process in ontological terms” (Carravetta 1989, vol. 3, no. 4, pp. 218–19). |
| 47 | Pareyson himself claims that it was precisely from his studies of art that he drew insights and decisive confirmation for his ontological hermeneutics. He writes, for example, in the final notes of Verità e interpretazione: “The very type of attention I devoted to existentialism in my early studies predisposed me to a theory of interpretation”. He adds: “The decisive insights came to me from the field of aesthetics, where the concept of interpretation seemed particularly fruitful […] not so much as the proper terrain of the concept of interpretation, but rather as the greatest verification of its original and omnivalent character” (Pareyson 1972, p. 239). For further information on Pareyson’s aesthetic philosophy, see in particular the comprehensive and accurate study by Pablo Blanco Sarto: (Blanco Sarto 1998; 2016). See also: Estetica ed ermeneutica. Turin: Francesco Iaconis Editore (Bottani 1993); Il sublime nell’ermeneutica di Luigi Pareyson. Turin: Rosenberg & Sellier (Marzano 1994); “Estética e Interpretación. La segunda y tercera formulación de una filosofía de la interpretación en Luigi Pareyson” (Uribe Miranda 2014, vol. 5, no. 2); “Formatividad e interpretación en la estética de Luigi Pareyson” (Acciaro 2020, vol. 45, no. 1). |
| 48 | In this vein, Ciglia notes: “the notion of interpretation will play a fundamental role in focusing on the peculiar modes of enjoyment or reading of the work of art” (Ciglia 1995, p. 126). |
| 49 | Ferraris’ observation is appropriate here: “In Pareyson, the reference to form allows the transfer of the aesthetics of the philosophy of the person, and the twofold function (artistic and existential) of interpretation as knowledge of forms by persons” (Ferraris 2010, p. 382). |
| 50 | From this we can understand why Pareyson calls his aesthetics a “theory of formativity”. |
| 51 | “In art, there is no general law other than the individual rule of the work that must be invented in the course of the operation: success is its own criterion, so that not only the rule but the work itself must be invented in the course of its execution, which therefore cannot have any other law than its own result” (Pareyson 2010, p. 66). |
| 52 | Exemplarity (esemplarità), as we shall see, is a mark of perfection of the work as successful and, with it, attestation of the form as universal and singular at the same time (cf. Pareyson 2010, pp. 139–40). |
| 53 | It seems interesting to note that what is defined as execution in Pareyson’s aesthetics already appears in very similar terms in the definition he gives to the concept of initiative in the first stage of his thought, that of ontological personalism (1938–1946). He wrote in his essay Persona e società in 1946–1948: “Initiative takes on the task of realising, at a given point, the essence of humanity contained in normative form by the need that drives it. […] It makes individual and particular elements into an unrepeatable singularity, precisely because it marks them with the stamp of its original decision, accepting them as a proposal to which to respond, […] as a possibility to be interpreted” (Pareyson 1950, p. 306). |
| 54 | This resistance should not be understood as an obstacle, but rather as a fruitful stimulus to the artist’s formative intention (cf. Pareyson 2010, p. 46). |
| 55 | “The effort of interpretation may require the reader to suppress certain personal attitudes that stand in the way of understanding the work; but this does not imply that the personality of the interpreter should be considered en bloc as an obstacle to understanding: the recommendation to eliminate those personal attitudes that prevent understanding can only mean an invitation to replace them with other attitudes, still personal, which are instead a condition for penetration” (Pareyson 2010, p. 243). |
| 56 | He continues: “It is only interest that can stretch the gaze to the point of questioning, and it is only respect that can direct the gaze to the point of penetration: interest enables the interpreter to question things, and respect enables him to listen to them” (Pareyson 2010, p. 211). |
| 57 | In fact, “the true artist is always in some way ‘inspired’” (Pareyson 2010, p. 87). |
| 58 | The duality of “activity-receptivity” will be taken up again in Pareyson’s later thinking, right up to his final elaboration. In fact, in Verità e interpretazione, he will speak of man as “a coincidence of reception and exercise of freedom, a synthesis of receptivity and activity, a response to a call, creative obedience; freedom through which man reduplicates himself in his being, in the sense that he is and allows himself to be, at the same time he is and welcomes being, simultaneously he is in relation to being and is this very relationship” (Pareyson 1972, p. 107). And in Ontologia della libertà: “the more intense the activity is, when it is sustained by a further activity […]. The necessity, the limitation that lies within the boundaries of existence, is precisely that receptivity which is constitutive of human activity and which, far from limiting, diminishing or replacing it, rather arouses and sustains it, intensifies and transports it” (Pareyson 2000, p. 15). |
| 59 | “Like things, works of art reveal themselves only to those who know how to penetrate them” (Pareyson 2010, p. 122). He continues: “[…] they then open up with a confidence equal only to primitive reserve, inviting us to cross the threshold of a serene and peaceful world, indeed drawing the worthy spectator in, bringing him closer and rewarding him with unexpected revelations” (Pareyson 2010, pp. 122–23). Pareyson applies here to the aesthetic field what he had already stated in Esistenza e Persona, and which he would continue to explore in his subsequent reflections, particularly in Verità e interpretazione, namely the conception of the person as a “highly singular living perspective” on being and truth (cf. Pareyson 1966, p. 175; Pareyson 1972, p. 17). |
| 60 | Blanco Sarto speaks of Pareyson’s form as an “organism”: “form is the whole organism, not just a part of it. Form is the whole entity […]” (Blanco Sarto 1998, p. 64). |
| 61 | |
| 62 | By spirituality, Pareyson means “the whole life of the person” which takes concrete form in its unique and unrepeatable expression, as a singular expression of the universal. In this sense: “in the work, soul and body are identified, and spirituality and physicality are the same thing” (Pareyson 2010, p. 10). It is interesting to note, among other things, a similarity with what Dilthey wrote in 1900: “But the work of a great poet or a great inventor, of a religious genius or an authentic philosopher will always and only be the true expression (Ausdruck) of his inner life” (Dilthey 2013, p. 15). |
| 63 | “When the execution manages to render the work in its full reality, to make it live its own life, in short, to be it, we have the ‘contemplation’ of the work, that which gives us the enjoyment and pleasure of it. True reading […] is a real possession of the work, not a passive abandonment to it, but a living of it in the act of bringing it to life” (Pareyson 2010, p. 260, our italics). |
| 64 | The historical and existential aspect has been central since the dawn of his philosophical meditation and has its roots in existentialism, to which the Turin philosopher devoted a large and important work in his youth: Studi sull’Esistentialismo (Pareyson 1943). This work significantly marked the first phase of Pareyson’s thought and those that followed, in which the Turin philosopher sought incessantly to combine the two issues he considered central and relevant to his time: existentialism and the philosophy of the person or personalism. |
| 65 | A further example is that of “operative teaching”, which takes place within a genuine relationship between teacher and pupil (cf. Pareyson 2010, 157 ff.). |
| 66 | It is interesting to note here that, for Pareyson, the success of a performance lies not so much in its harmony with the work as in its harmony with the audience (which, of course, presupposes harmony with the work itself). In fact, the performer interprets for the audience, which “is always determined and concrete, and the performer must get used to hearing it and anticipating its capabilities and needs: this sensitivity and foresight are reflected in his way of interpreting and performing” (Pareyson 2010, p. 263), both to calibrate their interpretation according to the audience and to offer “different ways of accessing” the work. |
| 67 | Exemplarity is a consequence and also a confirmation of the universal and at the same time particular character of form: “If a work can become exemplary, it is because form, in its perfection, is universal and singular at the same time, and its universality is inseparable from its singularity. […] in it, individuality and legality, determinacy and regularity, being and having to be are one: in other words, singularity and universality” (Pareyson 2010, p. 140). In this sense, exemplarity is not something created by the interpreter, but is intrinsic to every successful work and its law: “taking a work as a model does not mean constituting or creating its exemplarity, […] but means interpreting the work to the point of evoking and bringing into action its intrinsic exemplarity” (Pareyson 2010, pp. 144–45). |
| 68 | Developing this idea further, he wrote in Verità e interpretazione: “Every human relation, whether it be knowing or acting, access to art or relationships between people, historical knowledge or philosophical meditation, always has an interpretative character” (Pareyson 1972, p. 53). |
| 69 | “And that is why seeing a work of art as such means not only realizing the necessity of each of its parts and the connection that binds them all into an indissoluble unity, but also penetrating to the heart of this unity, to grasp the whole and see it present in every part: not only seeing the work emerge from its parts as the unity of a multiple, but also seeing the whole work live in each of its parts. But this is not possible without a dynamic consideration of the work of art, which sets in motion the apparent static nature of the definitive form [exemplarity]: the unity of the work appears only to those who know how to see its parts “in the act” of connecting and linking with each other and of calling and evoking each other; the integrity of the work appears only to those who know how to see the whole “in the act” of animating the parts, of constructing them and claiming them and ordering them” (Pareyson 2010, p. 108). |
| 70 | “[…] to say that the part evokes and reveals the whole is to say that each part claims and invokes the others: the only way to find the presence of the whole in the single part is to see each part in the act of claiming the others in order to connect with them indissolubly” (Pareyson 2010, p. 113). |
| 71 | “And as we proceed in the interpretation of things, interest and respect deepen, nourished by the same movement that gave rise to them […]; to the point where, once contemplation is achieved, interest in things becomes love of nature, which is both the effect and the condition of the contemplation of its beauty, and respect for things, fostered by the very contemplation that made it possible, becomes that pietas that accompanies the sense of the sacred and the divine” (Pareyson 2010, p. 211, our italics). |
| 72 | Pareyson does not develop his reflection on God further here, perhaps because he intends to maintain a purely philosophical, or more concretely phenomenological, discourse on art. Although, as Blanco Sarto rightly observes, his aesthetics has an evident ontological-metaphysical foundation: “although ontology is implicitly at the basis of the ‘aesthetics of formativity’, our author prefers not to develop explicitly metaphysical reflections” (Blanco Sarto 2002, p. 756). The theme of God will return with force in his philosophical hermeneutics of religious experience, developed in his Ontologia della libertà (cf. Pareyson 2000). |
| 73 | Understood in the audacious and beautiful sense evoked by Piero Coda in the Manifesto, first volume of the Dynamic Dictionary of Trinitarian Ontology (DDOT): “We are convinced that the most radical challenge today is that which commits us to ‘re-forming thinking’: that is, to rediscovering the path that allows us to look at reality in the horizon of its truest and deepest meaning and of the good that unites us all with the fascination of beauty. To give wings to a shared joy of existence and skilfully forge the right and incisive tools for a new concreteness. Rediscovering the original form of thinking means rediscovering that the identity of the human being in the concert of the universe is determined by its intrinsic intentionality towards something else: in knowing and loving” (Coda et al. 2021, p. XI). |
| 74 | We can therefore see here the diversity of language of our authors, without however being in opposition to each other. |
| 75 | He would only do so later, in Ontologia della libertà (Pareyson 2000), his last great hermeneutical reflection. |
| 76 | In this sense, we have seen that, in different ways, both Weil and Pareyson show a clear affinity with existentialist inspiration. |
| 77 | Carravetta also recognises, for example, the dynamic presence of a logos, understood in its etymological sense, in Pareyson’s aesthetic-interpretative analysis: “In effect, the path in between—the meta-hodos—artwork and interpreter cannot even be described without a logos which is at the same time (true to the several meanings that, etymologically, it embodies) the revealing word and the temporally determined, discursive inscription of the interpreting act itself” (Carravetta 1989, p. 232). |
| 78 | An attentive reader will have noticed that, in the section dedicated to Weil’s position, the term “person” is almost entirely absent. This is because it is a term that is not very congenial to Weil, who, in her radical attempt to avoid a subjectivist conception of the human being, believes it necessary to overcome this notion in order to access its deepest essence, which, being transcendent, is, in fact, impersonal. On this, cf. “La personne et le sacré” (Chenavier 2019, pp. 205–11). |
| 79 | In Enracinement, Weil further develops this aspect in her reflection on the value of human feelings, understood as a condition of possibility for receiving the truth that is revealed through the other (cf. Weil 2013, p. 277). |
| 80 | Although the question of suffering and evil is absent from Pareyson’s aesthetics, it is worth noting that it emerges strongly in Ontologia della libertà (Pareyson 2000), where the author recognises the urgent responsibility of philosophy to confront the problems of man and his destiny, and therefore also the problem of evil. In this perspective, Pareyson severely criticises post-war philosophies of a purely technical or abstract nature: “After those tragic experiences, it is desirable that philosophy should recover its participatory and enveloping thoughtfulness and abandon not only the rationalistic presumption that wants to explain everything, but also the defeatist abdication of these philosophies of pure evasion” (Pareyson 2000, p. 156). Unlike Weil, Pareyson’s reflection on human misery takes on a more tragic tone. For a stimulating exploration of this aspect, starting from and going beyond Pareyson, see: (Coda 2003, 322 ff.; 2005, pp. 197–214; Clemenzia and Martino 2020, pp. 93–114). |
| 81 | Gabellieri writes on this: “De-creation, as the destruction of all claims to possess being by oneself, led to a ‘new birth’ involving a total overhaul of the created being” (Gabellieri 2019b, pp. 243–57). |
| 82 | A particularly stimulating approach could be a tout court analysis of the development of their purely aesthetic reflection. |
| 83 | From a historical point of view, it should be remembered that, although Weil and Pareyson were both European philosophers of the 20th century and therefore ‘almost contemporaries’, Weil’s thinking, which we have focused on (1940–1943), developed entirely in the dramatic context of the Second World War, while Pareyson’s belongs to the post-war period (from 1950 onwards), an equally complex period but characterised by philosophical challenges and perspectives of a definitively different nature. |
| 84 | In this sense, in our opinion, both Weil’s and Pareyson’s reflections show early signs of that ‘renewed hermeneutics’ which outlines the “theor-etical” profile of Trinitarian ontological thought, as expressed by Piero Coda in his Manifesto: “Trinitarian ontology is therefore characterised, in the multiplicity of expressions it assumes and the links it fosters within the universe of knowledge, by the recognition and commitment to express trinitarily—in the exercise of a dialogue pursued as a radical experience of transparency, reciprocity and openness in and to truth—the Trinitarian meaning of B/being, welcoming its gift in the shared responsibility of ‘trinitisating’ it. This can happen and does happen within the lived space of interpersonal bonds that allow themselves to be freely determined by the form of Trinitarian agape” (Coda et al. 2021, p. 52). In this vein, especially starting from Weil’s reflection on malheur, it is worth emphasising the urgency and necessity—particularly felt in our current socio-political context—of a way of thinking capable of welcoming the contradictions of the world and of listening and responding, in a joint manner, to the cry of the suffering and of the earth (on this theme, it is worth mentioning in particular volumes 4 and 9 of the DDOT: respectively, Il grido. L’arte, la cosmopoli, il Crocifisso [Clemenzia and Martino 2022] and the very recent Gli ultimi sono/saranno i primi [Coda and Buffo 2025]). In this way, we rediscover the profound meaning of philosophy itself, in fidelity to the critical vocation of every man and woman as finite beings, but capable of infinity (cf. Coda et al. 2021, 86 ff.; Coda and Rossé 2020). |
| 85 | Simone Weil, too, in Quelques réflexions autour de la notion de valeur (Weil 2008, pp. 53–61), a text contemporary with the Essai and deeply linked to it, affirms that all great philosophical systems—those elaborated by true thinkers who sincerely seek the truth with a humble and self-effacing spirit—are equivalent, since they draw inspiration from the same transcendent source which is, in the last instance, the absolute truth (cf. Weil 2008, p. 58). In another contemporary note from her Cahiers, while reflecting on relation as that which confers being to things, the Parisian philosopher, in a sense, conveys the same idea, yet with profoundly different and paradoxical words (as so often happens!), leading us beyond our narrow notions to open ourselves to a truth that is ever greater: “‘To think the sound of a hand’. It is to seek the relation. Things that have no being except in relation. This holds for all things. […] Truth emerges from the encounter of two propositions, neither of which is true; it is their relation that is true” (Weil 2002a, p. 90). |
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Sanches, N. Reading and Performing: Interpreting Reality According to Simone Weil and Luigi Pareyson. Religions 2025, 16, 1280. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101280
Sanches N. Reading and Performing: Interpreting Reality According to Simone Weil and Luigi Pareyson. Religions. 2025; 16(10):1280. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101280
Chicago/Turabian StyleSanches, Noemi. 2025. "Reading and Performing: Interpreting Reality According to Simone Weil and Luigi Pareyson" Religions 16, no. 10: 1280. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101280
APA StyleSanches, N. (2025). Reading and Performing: Interpreting Reality According to Simone Weil and Luigi Pareyson. Religions, 16(10), 1280. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101280

