"No longer in a merely physical universe,
man lives in a symbolic universe.
Language, myth, art and religion
are parts of this universe.
They are varied threads which
weave the symbolic net,
the tangled web of human experience.
No longer can man confront reality immediately;
he cannot see it, as it were, face to face.
Physical reality seems to recede in proportion
as man's symbolic activity advances.
Instead of dealing with the things
themselves man is in a sense
constantly conversing with himself.
He has so enveloped himself in
linguistic forms, in artistic images,
in mythical symbols or religious rites that he
cannot see or know anything except by
the interposition of this artificial medium."
- Ernst Cassirer
Philosopher (1874 - 1945)
Language, myth, art and religion
are parts of this universe.
They are varied threads which
weave the symbolic net,
the tangled web of human experience.
No longer can man confront reality immediately;
he cannot see it, as it were, face to face.
Physical reality seems to recede in proportion
as man's symbolic activity advances.
Instead of dealing with the things
themselves man is in a sense
constantly conversing with himself.
He has so enveloped himself in
linguistic forms, in artistic images,
in mythical symbols or religious rites that he
cannot see or know anything except by
the interposition of this artificial medium."
- Ernst Cassirer
Philosopher (1874 - 1945)