Talk:Limit-experience
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So what is a "limit-experience"?
[edit]I don't think that the article explains it good enough. So I'm interested in further resources on this and an expansion of its explanation in the article.
Here's a few more specific questions:
- >A limit experience breaks the subject from itself.
- Sounds much like the psychedelic culture's depersonalization and ego death. Are those related or maybe even subordinate? (See: Psychonautics)
- >It was at the edge of limits where the ability to comprehend experience breaks down that Bataille sought to live.
- Shouldn't this say where Bataille sought to live?
- >the point of life which lies as close as possible to the impossibility of living, which lies at the limit or the extreme
- In what sense "impossible"? By biological means (e.g. starvation) or otherwise?
- >A limit-experience is a type of action or experience which approaches the edge of living in terms of its intensity and its seeming impossibility
- Again in what sense "impossible" (or is it rather "unlikely" / "abnormal" [in the sense of human experience]?)? And for instance would war-experiences be considered limit-experiences for their intensity?
- >Classical instances of limit experiences include abandonment, fascination, suffering, madness, and poetry [...]
- >Limit-experience is a type of somaesthetic "edgework" that goes on to test the limits of ordered reality
- So are "limit-experiences" altered states of consciousness evoked by intense, abnormal experiences that are not evoked by psychedelic drugs?