Aesthetic Realism Foundation

  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Directions
  • To Contribute
  • flat_facebook

Library

The Drama of Mind
By Eli Siegel

The following introduction to this lecture is from Ellen Reiss’s commentary in issue #885 of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known in which the first part of the lecture was published.

Introduction by Ellen Reiss

The Drama of Mind is a lecture that Eli Siegel gave in 1964. And in it he does this mighty thing: he shows what mind is, what is in common among minds anywhere, from the mind of a paramecium to the mind of Shakespeare.

Eli Siegel cared for, and in his teaching of Aesthetic Realism spoke and wrote on, such diverse describers of mind as Descartes, Locke, Leibniz, Kant, John Stuart Mill. Yet it is Mr. Siegel himself who explained mind, including mind at its most bewildering and bewildered. The thousands of Aesthetic Realism lessons he gave to individuals, beginning in 1941, constitute the greatest comprehension of mind in human history, the minds of real people in the midst of life. I am infinitely grateful to be one of them, and to say the following, which represents the effect of every lesson that Mr. Siegel gave: Eli Siegel, who explained the structure of mind as such, understood my mind in all its particularity.

He explained to me how I saw love, my family, education, the past. He enabled me to see where I was untrue to the deepest purpose of my mind, and the human mind—to like the world—and why therefore I felt bad. He taught me to use my mind exactly, widely. Eli Siegel was the greatest strengthener of people’s minds in world history.

This principle of Aesthetic Realism is true about mind anywhere—about your hoping, questioning mind: “The world, art, and self explain each other: each is the aesthetic oneness of opposites.” In The Drama of Mind Eli Siegel defines mind; and he shows that it is aesthetic. Mind is always making a one of such opposites as knowing and feeling, fact and value, self and world.

As a prelude to the first section of The Drama of Mind, in which Mr. Siegel discusses mind at its most primal, I quote three passages by him about the human mind. It is Eli Siegel who honored most the grandeur of that mind—who wrote, for example, in 1922, “Man’s mind was made to know everything.” And it is he who explained the source in the human mind of every instance of brutality that has ever been: contempt. “Contempt,” he wrote, “must be defeated if man is to be kind”; contempt “is a continuous, unseen desire making for mental insufficiency.” Contempt is the “disposition in every person to think he will be for himself by making less of the outside world.” The following three passages are great as English prose:

  1. This passage from Self and World describes the fight in every mind all the time:

The basic conflict in the human mind—present, I believe, in all particular conflicts—is that between a person warmly existing to his finger tips, and that person as related to indefinite outsideness. This is the subject and object conflict, the personal and impersonal conflict, the Self and World conflict. In every person there is a drive towards the caring for and pleasing of self; in every person there is a drive towards other things, a desire to meet and know these. Often this drive towards self as an exclusive thing collides painfully with the drive to widen the self.

  1. These sentences, also from Self and World, at once so critical and honoring of man, show with ringing conviction how central knowing is to what we are:

We can own the world only by knowing it. We can possess the world only by having it in our minds; that is, by having knowledge of it. All other possession, both in love and economics, is false and hurtful. It is seen by the possessor as a substitute for real possession, but it will never do. The unconscious will never be at ease.

  1. These sentences from “The Equality of Man,” published in the Modern Quarterly when he was twenty-one, represent that passionate, exact respect that Eli Siegel always had for every person’s mind:

Mind needs nourishment, care and training all by itself….And the fact is plain enough that millions and millions of people from the beginning of the world, with man living in it, have not got this mind’s nourishment, care and training. Their llves were forced to be led so, to get food enough for their stomachs, was all that they could do….And I say it is wrong, to say that any one’s mind is inferior, until it has been completely seen that it has been given all the nourishment, care and training that it needs or could get.

In the Aesthetic Realism consultations now taking place, is the true nourishment every person’s mind is hoping for. That nourishment exists because Eli Siegel himself was mind at its most beautiful and courageous.

 

Continue to Part 1

 

 

Film by Ken Kimmelman

Here we present a work of art that—more than any other we know—can bring people the true composure and strength of mind and feeling everyone is thirsting for. See the stirring film of Eli Siegel’s prize-winning poem Hot Afternoons Have Been in Montana.


NOW ONLINE

Definitions, and Comment: Being a Description of the World
by Eli Siegel

These exciting definitions are philosophic, powerfully logical, and always enormously important for our lives.

Classes
Films & Videos
Calendar

Most Viewed Posts

  • The Philosophy of Depression

  • The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known

  • “Alexander Calder: Art Answers the Questions of Our Lives”

  • Black & White: A Poem with Photographs

  • “Is Beauty the Making One of Opposites?”

  • “Books”—an Essay for Children

  • “A Good Husband: What Does That Mean?”

  • “Man and Nature in New York and Kansas”

  • “Hawthorne’s ‘The Man of Adamant’”

  • “The Beauty of Art & the Pain about Love”

  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Mission Statement
    • What Is Aesthetic Realism?
    • Eli Siegel, Founder
    • Faculty
    • Some Background
  • Calendar
  • How to Study
    Aesthetic Realism
    • Classes
      • The Aesthetic Realism Explanation of Poetry
      • Anthropology Is about You & Everyone
      • “If It Moves, It Can Move You”: Opposites in the Cinema
      • The Visual Arts & the Opposites
      • The Aesthetic Realism Teaching Method
      • The Opposites in Music
      • Understanding Marriage!
    • Consultations
      • What Happens in an Aesthetic Realism Consultation?
      • Aesthetic Realism Consultation of Nancy Huntting
      • Coldness, Warmth, & Mistakes by Jaime Torres, DPM
      • What Kind of Effect on Men? by Lauren Phillips
      • My Aesthetic Realism Consultations by Richita Anderson
      • The Fight about Excitement by Dan McClung
      • The Trouble with Competition by Miriam Weiss
    • Workshops for Educators
    • Outreach
      • Art Talks
      • Architecture
      • Bullying
      • Film Presentations
      • Seniors
      • Theatre Company
      • Young People
  • Events
    • Public Seminars
    • Theatrical & Musical Matinees
    • Saturday Night Presentations
    • Directions
  • Periodical
  • Library
    • Online Library
    • Films & Videos
    • Blog
    • Lectures
      • Aesthetic Realism and Love, Introduction
      • Aesthetic Realism and Love, Part 1
      • Aesthetic Realism and Love, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Expression, Introduction by Ellen Reiss
      • Aesthetic Realism and Expression, Part 1
      • Aesthetic Realism and Expression, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Hope
      • Aesthetic Realism and Hope, Part 2
      • The Drama of Mind, Introduction
      • The Drama of Mind, Part 1
      • The Drama of Mind, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Introduction
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Part 1
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Part 2
      • Aesthetic Realism and Learning, Part 3
      • Map to Happiness, by Eli Siegel
      • Greenwich Village Is in the World
      • Mind and Intelligence, Introduction by Ellen Reiss
      • Mind and Intelligence, by Eli Siegel, Part 1
      • Mind and Intelligence, by Eli Siegel, Part 2
      • Mind and Intelligence, by Eli Siegel, Part 3
      • Mind and Schools
      • Mind and Schools by Eli Siegel, Part 1
      • Mind and Schools by Eli Siegel, Part 2
      • Mind and Schools by Eli Siegel, Part 3
      • Aesthetic Realism and People
      • Aesthetic Realism and Education
      • So, What Is Bitterness?
    • News Archive
    • Related Resources
  • Book Store
  • Visual & Dramatic Arts
    • Terrain Gallery
    • Koppelman Foundation
    • Aesthetic Realism Theatre Company
  • En Español

To Contribute | Contact | En Español

Aesthetic Realism Foundation    141 Greene Street   New York, NY 10012   212.777.4490

Privacy Policy | Blog Comment Policy   Copyright © 1997–2025   Aesthetic Realism Foundation

To Contribute | Contact | En Español

Aesthetic Realism Foundation
141 Greene Street
New York, NY 10012
212.777.4490

Privacy Policy

Blog Comment Policy

Copyright © 1997–2025
Aesthetic Realism Foundation

MENU
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Mission Statement
    • What Is Aesthetic Realism?
    • Eli Siegel, Founder
    • Faculty
    • Some Background
  • Calendar
  • How to Study
    Aesthetic Realism
    • Classes
    • Consultations
    • Workshops for Educators
    • Outreach
  • Events
    • Public Seminars
    • Theatrical & Musical Matinees
    • Saturday Night Presentations
    • Directions
  • Periodical
  • Library
    • Online Library
    • Films & Videos
    • Blog
    • Lectures
    • News Archive
    • Related Resources
  • Book Store
  • Visual & Dramatic Arts
    • Terrain Gallery
    • Koppelman Foundation
    • Aesthetic Realism Theatre Company
  • En Español
    • Subscribe
    • Contact
    • Directions
    • To Contribute
    • flat_facebook