On August 05, 2007 4:44 PM, in [NABOKV-L] [THOUGHTS] Darwin and
Nabokov - William Blake's lines about "whose
immortal hand or eye could frame thy fearful symmetry" were mentioned
and a query was next addressed to invite S.Blackwell and De La
Durantaye to discuss their ideas concerning the possibility
that Nabokov had silently asked himself a similar question when he
wrote about the detailed mimicry work that far excelled natural
selection's demands: had VN drawn a parallel bt. nature as art and art as nature and questioned this
same "mysterious hand"?
Rachel Trousdale
asked:"does
Nabokov draws a clear line between aesthetic/artistic and scientific
reasoning or knowledge?[...] Both of your papers suggest a distinction
between scientific and aesthetic kinds of knowledge....
S.Blackwell answered
that Nabokov [...] "tends in his public comments
to draw attention both to distinctions and to commonalities [...] I
have found in my work that Nabokov believed that there was, or should
be, an essential aesthetic component in scientific work, and that
aesthetic knowledge plays a real role in envisioning aspects of reality
that are not amenable to quantification. In this sense, I have found
that he was very close to Goethe." and De la Durantaye
wrote:[...] "the answer is: no
and yes. Not only does Nabokov not draw a clear line, he
inverts the things normally separated by it[...] Nevertheless, he does
draw an implicit line in that he does not include his metaphysical
arguments (at least not in anything like full form) against natural
selection in his scientific writing—he reserves them for Speak, Memory,
Strong Opinions and, through the prism of art, The Gift.[...] he does
not distinguish between different types of knowledge (though he does
write about different levels—most pertinently for this question, the
degrees of “reality” for the “ordinary person,” the naturalist and the
botanist all observing a lily in Strong Opinions)."
Jansy Mello: We remember
that in an interview with Alfred Appel Jr. ( Montreux, 1966) Nabokov
blurred the line bt. the aesthetic and scientific in one aspect,
namely, the need to work both with facts and with fancy which he
thought was as necessary to the scientist as it was to the artist ( "I certainly welcome the free interchange of
terminology between any branch of science and any raceme of art.
There is no science without fancy, and no art without facts.").
In the
envoy of Lectures on Literature, Nabokov also offered another
point in common bt. art and science, now very distinct from the one
quoted above, because he departed from his subjective experience of "a
tingle" ( Cf."the thrill of pure science is just as pleasurable as
the pleasure of pure art. The main thing is to experience that tingle
in any development of thought or emotion.")
In a letter to E.Wilson, Nabokov mentioned, informally, that
whereas science was always open to revision ( changing the perspective
from where we look at nature), a work of art was not. I would like to
hear S.B comments about this distinction (science and work of art) and
return to my original question of Aug.05, formulated now as: If we
could now leave out the pair "science and art" and shift to the
pair "nature and art" would we find other indications about
VN's clear-line separation bt. those two? Would we discover more about
his concept of "a design" in nature and art?