『THE SILENCE AND THE MYSTERY OF COSMOS - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS』のカバーアート

THE SILENCE AND THE MYSTERY OF COSMOS - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS

THE SILENCE AND THE MYSTERY OF COSMOS - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS

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概要

THE SILENCE AND THE MYSTERY OF COSMOS — Alexis Karpouzos The history of human thought is, in many ways, the history of an attempt to speak the cosmos—to name it, to measure it, to translate its vastness into concepts, laws, and systems. From myth to metaphysics, from theology to modern science, the universe has been approached as something that can be rendered intelligible. Yet in the thought of Alexis Karpouzos, the cosmos withdraws from this ambition. It does not refuse knowledge, but it exceeds it. Its most profound dimension is not what can be said, but what remains irreducibly silent. This silence is not emptiness in the sense of lack. It is not a deficiency waiting to be filled by explanation. Rather, it is a generative openness—a pre-conceptual field from which all forms, meanings, and distinctions emerge. Before there is language, before there are categories such as being and non-being, order and chaos, subject and object, there is a silent unfolding. The cosmos, in this view, is not constructed upon a foundation, but arises from an unfounded depth that cannot be stabilized into a final principle. To encounter the cosmos, then, is not simply to observe it as an external object, but to participate in its unfolding. The human subject is not outside the cosmos, looking in; it is one of its transient configurations. Consciousness itself is an event within the cosmic process, a local articulation of a much broader movement. And yet, consciousness introduces a rupture: it names, distinguishes, and separates. It transforms the silent continuity of the cosmos into a world of objects and oppositions. This act of differentiation is necessary, but it comes at a cost. The more the world is articulated, the more the underlying silence recedes from awareness. We come to believe that reality consists only of what can be defined and measured, forgetting that every definition presupposes an indeterminate background that makes it possible. The mystery of the cosmos is not located in what we do not yet know, but in what cannot, in principle, be fully known. In this sense, silence is not the opposite of knowledge, but its condition. Every statement emerges from a horizon that it cannot exhaust. Every concept stabilizes a movement that continues beyond it. The cosmos is not a closed system governed by fixed laws alone, but a dynamic field in which order and disorder, structure and transformation, continuously interweave. What we call "laws" are temporary regularities—patterns that arise within a deeper, non-totalizable process. This perspective also transforms the way we understand time. The cosmos does not unfold in a simple linear progression from past to future. Rather, it expresses a more complex temporality—what might be called a "timeless time," in which emergence and dissolution coexist. In such a temporality, nothing is absolutely fixed, yet nothing is simply lost. Every form is both appearing and disappearing, sustained by an invisible rhythm that does not belong to chronological time. The silence of the cosmos is thus inseparable from its mystery. But this mystery is not something to be solved. It is not a problem awaiting a final answer, but a dimension of reality that invites a different mode of relation. Instead of seeking to dominate or fully comprehend the cosmos, thought is called to attune itself to its unfolding. This requires a shift from control to participation, from certainty to openness. In the thought of Alexis Karpouzos, this shift has profound implications. It challenges the metaphysical desire for ultimate foundations and the epistemological demand for complete transparency. It also calls into question the human tendency to position itself at the center of the universe. If the cosmos is fundamentally silent and unfounded, then no perspective—including the human one—can claim absolute authority. Yet this is not a nihilistic conclusion. On the contrary, it opens a space for a more intimate relation to existence. When the need to fix meaning dissolves, a different kind of understanding becomes possible—one that does not reduce the world to what can be grasped, but remains receptive to what exceeds it. The mystery of the cosmos is not an obstacle, but a condition of its richness. To think the cosmos in this way is to accept that not everything can be said, and that what cannot be said is not less real. Silence becomes not a limit, but a depth. It is the space in which thought begins, the horizon it can never fully reach, and the groundless ground from which all worlds arise. In this silent mystery, the cosmos is not a problem to be solved, but an event to be lived.
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