Abstract
If we are to escape reification—a sort of cogni-
tive neutrality of basic, gnosic apprehension of the world
plus a fundamental disrespect of the other as free agent—we
should recognize our mode of existence as always already
one of existential engagement with and within experience,
aiming at articulating and expressing this engagement. One
way of fully inhabiting this, let’s call it the proper human
stance, is through recognizing a pendular space between
the basic attitudes of acknowledging lived, shared interests
and values and avoiding being bound to and dependent on
the values of others. Both philosophy as radical critical re-
flection, and art, or artistic processes of production and re-
ception, can be seen as invitations to inhabit this pendular
space of human experience, by way of continually opening
up our habits of sensibility to new engagements in thought
and life, and successfully articulating and expressing these
engagements in public forms. I take Cavell’s reading of
Wittgenstein’s mature philosophy as an attuning to an apt
attitude towards this invitation. Is this attitude one possible,
non-procedural meaning of “liberalism”?