Abstract

Silent experiences are integral parts of human life, and despite such moments of silence-phenomena may falsely be perceived as moments of "nothings", they are in fact an essential part of human apperception and meaning-making. The significance of moments of silence (an internal, timeless state of being often perceived as solitary, spiritual-mystical, and unconscious, involuntary experiences) and silences (contextual states of temporally oriented and social experiences) is supported by the principles behind the concepts of Gestalten and zero signifiers, in that such absence can lead to greater understanding of meaning than any explicit and direct element ever could. The human experience of life is inseparably linked with the function of apperception as experiencing the presence in a combination with reconstruction of the past and imagination of the future. And as this dynamic across irreversibility of time is in any human experience it is as well present within experiences of silence. Furthermore, is the phenomenon of Einfühlung (the process of feeling in and through others, objects, and oneself) a crucial part of silence-phenomena, as it is uncovered to be connected with both silence as a facilitator of emergence of silence as well as silences affect the act of Einfühlung. Aesthetic experiences can in the form of poetic instants lead to moments of silence, through the human function of Einfühlung. Finally, an analysis of a passage from Lev Vygotsky's personal notebooks will support the line of reasoning the centrality of the existence of silence.

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