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      The Fate of Place

      The Fate of Place

      A Philosophical History

      Edward S. Casey

      University of California Press

      Berkeley / Los Angeles / London

      The publisher wishes to thank Bernard Tschumi Architects for permission to reproduce three images in this volume (all appear in this volume’s chapter 12).

      University of California Press

      Berkeley and Los Angeles, California

      University of California Press

      London, England

      First Paperback Printing 1998

      Copyright © 1997 by The Regents of the University of California

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Casey, Edward S.

      The fate of place : a philosophical history / Edward S. Casey.

      p. cm.

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      ISBN 978-0-520-27603-1 (pbk : alk. paper)

      eISBN 9780520954564

      1. Place (Philosophy)2. Space and time.I. Title.

      B105.P53C361997

      114—dc20

      96-6411

      CIP

      Printed in the United States of America

      16 15 14 13

      4 3 2 1

      The paper used in this publication is both acid-free and totally chlorine-free (TCF). It meets the minimum requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (R 1997) (Permanence of Paper).

      In Living Memory of Three Extraordinary Mentors

      Mikel Dufrenne (1910–1995), William Earle (1919–1988), John Niemeyer Findlay (1903–1987)

      Whose Exemplary Practice, in Speech and Writing, Taught Me the Force and Value of Taking Philosophical History Seriously

      Contents

Preface: Disappearing Places
Acknowledgments
Part OneFrom Void to Vessel
1Avoiding the Void: Primeval Patterns
2Mastering the Matrix: The Enuma Elish and Plato’s Timaeus
3Place as Container: Aristotle’s Physics
Part TwoFrom Place to Space
Interlude
4The Emergence of Space in Hellenistic and Neoplatonic Thought
5The Ascent of Infinite Space: Medieval and Renaissance Speculations
Part ThreeThe Supremacy of Space
Interim
6Modern Space as Absolute: Gassendi and Newton
7Modern Space as Extensive: Descartes
8Modern Space as Relative: Locke and Leibniz
9Modern Space as Site and Point: Position, Panopticon, and Pure Form
Part FourThe Reappearance of Place
Transition
10By Way of Body: Kant, Whitehead, Husserl, Merleau-Ponty
11Proceeding to Place by Indirection: Heidegger
12Giving a Face to Place in the Present: Bachelard, Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari, Derrida, Irigaray
Postface: Places Rediscovered
Notes
Index

      Preface: Disappearing Places

      The power of place will be remarkable.

      —Aristotle, Physics

      No man therefore can conceive anything, but he must conceive it in some place.

      —Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan

      The present epoch will perhaps be above all the epoch of space. . . . The anxiety of our era has to do fundamentally with space, no doubt a great deal more than with time.

      —Michel Foucault, “Of Other Spaces”

      I

      Whatever is true for space and time, this much is true for place: we are immersed in it and could not do without it. To be at all—to exist in any way—is to be somewhere, and to be somewhere is to be in some kind of place. Place is as requisite as the air we breathe, the ground on which we stand, the bodies we have. We are surrounded by places. We walk over and through them. We live in places, relate to others in them, die in them. Nothing we do is unplaced. How could it be otherwise? How could we fail to recognize this primal fact?

      Aristotle recognized it. He made “where” one of the ten indispensable categories of every substance, and he gave a sustained and perspicacious account of place in his Physics. His discussion set off a debate that has lasted until the present day. Heidegger, for example, contends with Aristotle as to what being in a place signifies for “being-in-the-world.” More recently still, Irigaray has returned to Aristotle’s idea of place as essential to an ethics of sexual difference. Between Aristotle and Irigaray stretch more than two millennia of thought and teaching and writing about place—a period that includes such diverse debating partners as Iamblichus and Plotinus, Cusa and Bruno, Descartes and Locke, Newton and Leibniz, Bachelard and Foucault.

      Yet the history of this continuing concern with place is virtually unknown. Unknown in that it has been hidden from view. Not deliberately or for the sake of being obscure, much less to mislead: unlike the unconscious, place is not so controversial or so intrusive or embarrassing as to require repression. On the contrary, just because place is so much with us, and we with it, it has been taken for granted, deemed not worthy of separate treatment. Also taken for granted is the fact that we are implaced beings to begin with, that place is an a priori of our existence on earth. Just because we cannot choose in the matter, we believe we do not have to think about this basic facticity very much, if at all. Except when we are disoriented or lost—or contesting Aristotle’s Physics—we presume that the question is settled, that there is nothing more to say on the subject.

      But there is a great deal to say, even if quite a lot has been said already by previous thinkers. Yet this rich tradition of place-talk has been bypassed or forgotten for the most part, mainly because place has been subordinated to other terms taken as putative absolutes: most notably, Space and Time. Beginning with Philoponus in the sixth century A.D. and reaching an apogee in fourteenth-century theology and above all in seventeenth-century physics, place has been assimilated to space. The latter, regarded as infinite extension, has become a cosmic and extracosmic Moloch that consumes every corpuscle of place to be found within its greedy reach. As a result, place came to be considered a mere “modification” of space (in Locke’s revealing term)—a modification that aptly can be called “site,” that is, leveled-down, monotonous space for building and other human enterprises. To make matters worse, in the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries place was also made subject to time, regarded as chronometric and universal, indeed as “the formal a priori condition of all appearances whatsoever,” in Kant’s commanding phrase.1 Even space, as the form of “outer sense,” became subject to temporal determination. Place, reduced to locations between which movements of physical bodies occur, vanished from view almost altogether in the era of temporo-centrism (i.e., a belief in the hegemony of time) that has dominated the last two hundred years of philosophy in the wake of Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, Darwin, Bergson, and William James.

      I say that place disappeared “almost altogether.” It never went entirely out of sight. Part of its very hiddenness—as Heidegger would insist—includes being at least partially unhidden. In bringing out the concealed history

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