...and undefined

I just said, "Materialism is the beautiful failure of a worldview to coincide with itself."

But already, the worldview that I just outlined, is failing to coincide with itself.

Perhaps it is better to say, "The material is the beautiful failure of a worldview to coincide with itself."  Or better yet, "Materiality is the beautiful failure of a worldview to coincide with itself" (because, who knows what the material is, in itself?  It seems more cautious to focus on that specific attribute of the material that makes it material... but does that necessarily imply an essentialism, which diverts us from the material?  Likely so, but perhaps this is a necessary diversion....)

So: Materiality is the beautiful failure of a worldview to coincide with itself.  Materialism is the appreciation of that beauty.

No, not quite.  Materiality is the beautiful failure of a worldview to coincide with itself.  The materialist appreciates that beauty.  This appreciation is always in danger of becoming reified, until it, itself, becomes a worldview.  Can we call this worldview, which is a reification of the appreciation of the beauty of the failure of a worldview to coincide with itself... material-ism?  And this kind of reification would mistake an ideological abstraction, an "ism," for the concrete situation, perhaps even substituting material reality with an ideal concept (of material reality).

If so, then it would appear that the only way to be a materialist is to oppose materialism.



(in the same way that situationists are opposed to Situationism.)

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