Christopher Gabro - Aristotle


Aristotle classifies poetry as an art that is the instinct of imitation.  We derive poetry from learned lesion, pleasures, and the objects we delight in.  But over time poetry has revealed itself to be more than just a means of conveying groaned information.  Poets from the surrealist school of art have used poetry to express a stream of consciousness.  Poetry has become a way of throwing ideas into words without having the mind present.  It has become the complete removal of a fully away and present being and allows ideas to flow to paper.  Aristotle’s classification is liminal in its understanding of the way in which poetry can express.  Aside from unraveling the unconscious side of human experience, poetry can be used in a hermeneutical manner that allows a broader understanding of a text.  Heidegger used poetry because it required a different form of thinking that he finds philosophy has stopped using.

Should their poetry have used in the way that Aristotle calls for, or should poetry function as a device as drawing one close to Being?

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