Chapter 1: | Uproarious Prologue |
In a philosophical anthropology treating positionality of living organisms in relation to their physical, structural boundaries, laughter and crying are understood as boundary events, showing “loss of control, a breakdown of the equilibrium between man and his physical existence” (65).
The phenomenon of laughter involves intensifying human positional eccentricity: “We move inwardly away from ourselves and come to have an objective distance from ourselves” (112). Laughter “is doubtless to be found in that aesthetic distance which lays claim only to our contemplation and apprehension and even lets us sit in the orchestra while we ourselves stand on the stage” (113). Although the final revelation of eccentricity, it emerges through its abdication: “Laughter is pleasurable and ‘healthy’ as a reaction of letting oneself go in a physical automatism, as a surrender of the controlled unity of man and body, which demands a constant expenditure in inhibition and in drives” (114).