Haven't read all of these newfangled moderns, but I liked how Madoka Magica dealt with it. General principles can be novel, and are generated with particular exemplars, but the principle then retroactively effects the past as if it were present all along, and projects into the future. — Wosret
Problems with it is that if we want to keep things at the level of the apparent, or physical, then to become exemplary is to follow a certain path, as it were, to reproduce material circumstances, and conditions. The preciser the conditions, the closer the result.
In other words, to give the example, 'I love you' is not to state that I love you, but to put it to another use that does not, for all that, make it mean something else altogether. — StreetlightX
On the other hand, the example defines the very class which it is supposed to be subsumed under. — StreetlightX
Examples of a class can only be picked out once we know how the class is defined, no? — John
...which always takes place by reference to a paradigmatic instance which is then subsequently taken to be a particular among others. — StreetlightX
Agamben puts it thus: "the example is characterized by the fact that it holds for all cases of the same type, and, at the same time, it is included among these. It is one singularity among others, which, however, stands for each of them and serves for all. On one hand, every example is treated in effect as a real particular case; but on the other, it remains understood that it cannot serve in its particularity ... Neither particular nor universal, the example is a singular object that presents itself as such, that shows its singularity." (The Coming Community). In other words, examples have a self-referential function. — StreetlightX
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