Progress and Values in the Humanities: Comparing Culture and Science

Progress and Values in the Humanities: Comparing Culture and Science

by Volney Gay
Progress and Values in the Humanities: Comparing Culture and Science

Progress and Values in the Humanities: Comparing Culture and Science

by Volney Gay

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Overview

Money and support tend to flow in the direction of economics, science, and other academic departments that demonstrate measurable "progress." The humanities, on the other hand, offer more abstract and uncertain outcomes. A humanist's objects of study are more obscure in certain ways than pathogens and cells. Consequently, it seems as if the humanities never truly progress. Is this a fair assessment?

By comparing objects of science, such as the brain, the galaxy, the amoeba, and the quark, with objects of humanistic inquiry, such as the poem, the photograph, the belief, and the philosophical concept, Volney Gay reestablishes a fundamental distinction between science and the humanities. He frees the latter from its pursuit of material-based progress and restores its disciplines to a place of privilege and respect. Using the metaphor of magnification, Gay shows that, while we can investigate natural objects to the limits of imaging capacity, magnifying cultural objects dissolves them into noise. In other words, cultural objects can be studied only within their contexts and through the prism of metaphor and narrative.

Gathering examples from literature, art, film, philosophy, religion, science, and psychoanalysis, Gay builds a new justification for the humanities. By revealing the unseen and making abstract ideas tangible, the arts create meaningful wholes, which itself is a form of progress.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231147903
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2009
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Volney Gay is professor of religion, psychiatry, and anthropology at Vanderbilt University and is a training analyst at the St. Louis Psychoanalytic Institute. He is the author of six other books, including Freud on Sublimation: Reconsiderations; Joy and the Objects of Psychoanalysis: Literature, Belief, and Neurosis; and Reading Jung: Science, Psychology, and Religion.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. A New Answer
2. Magnification and Cultural Objects
3. Back to Freud, Back to the Greeks!
4. Seven of Nine and Five of Nine
5. Canals on Mars: Exploring Imaginary Worlds
6. Searching for Essences: Freud and Wittgenstein
7. High Art and the Power to Guess the Unseen from the Seen
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

Ronald L. Grimes

This is an important book, superbly written and brilliantly argued. Volney Gay has an utterly rare sensibility. He understands complex issues, articulates difficult abstractions, and yet, at the same time, has a remarkable facility with words. He always searches out the apt illustration. He is widely literate not only in academic discourse but in popular culture, and he stitches together insights from these sources with remarkable facility.

Ronald L. Grimes, Radboud University, Nijmegen

Christof Koch

Volney Gay achieves his aim in a masterful, case-study-like manner by examining a wide-ranging set of characters-philosophers, artists, statesmen-along with their works and his own profession: psychoanalysis. His is a fascinating and erudite exegesis.

Christof Koch, California Institute of Technology

Mark U. Edwards Jr.

Volney Gay's book touches on issues found in many different fields in the humanities and contributes in its own way to all of them.

Mark U. Edwards Jr., Harvard Divinity School

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