Keats concept as a Negative capability
Negative
capability describes the capacity of human
beings to transcend and revise their contexts.
The term has been used by poets and philosophers to describe the ability
of the individual to perceive, think, and operate beyond any presupposition of
a predetermined capacity of the human being. It further captures the rejection
of the constraints of any context, and the ability to experience phenomena free
from epistemological bounds, as well as to assert one's
own will and individuality upon their activity. The term was first used by the Romantic poet John Keats to critique those who sought to categorize all
experience and phenomena and turn them into a theory of knowledge. It has
recently been appropriated by philosopher and social theorist Roberto
Mangabeira Unger
to comment on human nature and to explain how human beings innovate and resist
within confining social contexts. The concept has also inspired psychoanalytic
practices and twentieth-century art and literary criticism.
John Keats used the term negative
capability to describe the artist's receptiveness to the world and its
natural marvel, and to reject those who tried to formulate theories or
categorical knowledge. In this concept, Keats posited the world and the human
to be of infinite depth. Such a position put Keats at the forefront of the Romantic movement, and even at the cusp of modernism, according to some commentators.
I had not a dispute but a disquisition
with Dilke, upon various subjects; several
things dove-tailed in my mind, and at once it struck me what quality went to
form a Man of Achievement, especially in Literature, and which Shakespeare possessed so enormously - I mean
Negative Capability, that is, when a man is capable of being in uncertainties,
mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason -
Coleridge, for instance, would let go by a fine isolated verisimilitude caught
from the Penetralium of mystery, from being incapable of remaining content with
half-knowledge. This pursued through volumes would perhaps take us no further
than this, that with a great poet the sense of Beauty overcomes every other
consideration, or rather obliterates all consideration.
Keats understood Coleridge as
searching for a single, higher-order truth or solution to the mysteries of the
natural world. He went on to find the same fault in Dilke and Wordsworth. All
these poets, he claimed, lacked objectivity and universality in their view of
the human condition and the natural world. In each case, Keats found a mind
which was a narrow private path, not a "thoroughfare for all
thoughts." Lacking for Keats were the central and indispensable qualities
requisite for flexibility and openness to the world, or what he referred to as
negative capability.
This concept of Negative Capability is
precisely a rejection of set philosophies and preconceived systems of nature.
He demanded that the poet be receptive rather than searching for fact or
reason, and to not seek absolute knowledge of every truth, mystery, or doubt.
Roberto Unger appropriated Keats' term
in order to explain resistance to rigid social divisions and hierarchies. For
Unger, negative capability is the "denial of whatever in our
contexts delivers us over to a fixed scheme of division and hierarchy and to an
enforced choice between routine and rebellion." It is thus through negative
capability that we can further empower ourselves against social and
institutional constraints, and loosen the bonds that entrap us in a certain
social station.
An example of negative capability can
be seen at work in industrial innovation. In order to create an innovator's
advantage and develop new forms of economic enterprise, the modern
industrialist could not just become more efficient with surplus extraction
based on pre-existing work roles, but rather needed to invent new styles of
flexible labor, expertise, and capital management.
This thesis of negative capability
addresses the problem of agency in relation to structure. It recognizes the constraints of
structure and its molding influence upon the individual, but at the same time
finds the individual able to resist, deny, and transcend their context. Unlike
other theories of structure and agency, negative capability does not
reduce the individual to a simple actor possessing only the dual capacity of
compliance or rebellion, but rather sees him as able to partake in a variety of
activities of self empowerment.
ODE
TO AUTTUM
ODE
TO A NIGHTINGALE
ODE
TO A PSYCHE
ODE
ON A GRECIAN URN
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