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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta essence. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta essence. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, 19 de abril de 2026

FORM AND ESSENCE IN PLATO

 


The path to a definition of the notion of form necessarily passes through Plato, who places this theme from the beginning of his works and will progressively give it a central role in his philosophical system. Reflections on form inevitably return to this matrix, so it is necessary to take a position on its conceptions. The approach made in this work does not intend to reconstruct the endless debates around Plato, an impossible question given its breadth. For this reason, it focuses exclusively on establishing, in a synthetic way, the nucleus of Plato's theory of form, which serves as an input for its contemporary elucidation.

I take as a reference two current reflections that I consider to shed light on a correct way of understanding the Platonic form: the relationship between form and essence, as proposed by Vasilis Politis; and the transformations that form undergoes in Plato's last dialogues, especially in the Parmenides and in The Sophist, analyzed by Cordero.  In order to contextualize these visions of Plato, one can consult the work of Larsen and Politis. (Politis, Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms, 2021) (Cordero, 2016)(Larsen & Politis, 2025)

The first sentence of Politis's text enunciates the central thesis of his work, around which his interpretation of Plato will revolve: form and essence are the same; that is, essence is form. This argument is based on the understanding that the essence asks about the ti esti, what is it? and does not attempt anything other than to answer this question.

The topic of the present study is Plato's theory of Forms, as it used to be called. The thesis of the study is that Plato's Forms simply are essences and that Plato's theory of Forms is a theory of essence – essences, in the sense of what we are committed to by the supposition that the ti esti ('What is it?') question can be posed and, all going well, answered. This thesis says that the characteristics that, as is generally recognised, Plato attributes to Forms, he attributes to them because he thinks that it can be shown that essences, on the original and minimal sense of essence, must be so characterized. (Politis, Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms, 2021, pág. 1)

Although this thesis is clearly based on this correct sense of essence, which inquires about what a thing is, or what makes a thing what it is, it leaves its relationship with form unanswered. Why does the fact of asking about the essence mean introducing the question of the form? The conclusion that follows from this reasoning is that the question of essence is equivalent to the question of form. In other words, answering the what a thing is means recognizing the form behind it as its essence. Everything that exists is formed in some way.

This relationship between form and essence can be clarified by clarifying that essence gives itself in beings as form; thus, discovering its essence is the same as recognizing the form that makes it what it is; that is, the essence has this formative function. It is assumed that, insofar as entities have an essence, they simultaneously possess a form. Moreover, the conclusion resulting from this reasoning leads to the expression that, if everything has an essence, then everything has a form. The formless, just as non-being, as will be seen later, exists in a relational way; that is, this reality is formless with respect to this other reality; but, in itself, it is not.

This question of the identity between form and essence is evident when looking at any object in daily life, in which answering the question of what it is is generally simple; However, when it comes to questions such as goodness, truth, beauty, and justice, the question becomes very difficult. In these cases, we are required to make extensive and in-depth considerations to answer the question, and the answers given are always disputed. Thus, the form of justice requires a careful investigation to know what its essence is.

If there is one thing that Socrates, as Plato represents him, is convinced of, it is that the ti esti question, especially when asked of certain things or qualities, such as beauty, equality, unity, justice, is a most important and profoundly difficult one, the answering of which is a major undertaking and requires demanding enquiry. (Politis, Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms, 2021, pág. 2)

Once this first consideration has been given, which intersects essence, form and the question "What is it?", Plato demands that the answer to this question be unitary and explanatory. These two necessary requirements refer to a much more complicated problem, which arises from the existence of the multiple, in respect of which the essence is unity; that is, entities that share the same essence and that, for this reason, are the same, similar or belong to the same field of phenomena without necessarily being identical.

If we observe that one reality p has the essence r, and that another reality q has the essence r, and so on with a series of objects, we must admit that several realities may have the same essence; but this essence does not arise by means of inductive procedures, but goes beyond the concrete fact; and, therefore,  The answer through the exemplar to the question what is it becomes insufficient; in the same way, the question "What is color?" is not solved by saying that this object is red or green. The essence of color covers the set of all colors.

In addition to their unitary character, essences must have an explanatory character. The essences that make a thing what it is are enough to make it possible for that thing to be what it is. The essence gives the entity the attributes and characteristics that make it what it is: "Plato associates further substantive requirements with the This is you question; in particular, the answer to the question must be unitary, and it must be explanatory". (Politis, Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms, 2021, pág. 2)

The next step that tends to be taken almost automatically is to interpret Plato following Aristotle's elaborations; the essence is quickly linked to the substance; but we must remain in the direct definition of essence, as a form that makes a thing what it is, without presupposing or conferring existence on that of which it is essence: "For it follows from this that, against a common understanding of Plato's Forms, we have no reason at all to suppose that Forms are substances that have essences; all we have reason to suppose is that they simply are essences. I shall conclude the present study with this result and add that this shows that Plato's Forms are not self(Aristóteles, 1994)-predicative, or self-predicative in the way they would be if they were substances having essences and distinct from their essence." . For example, a unicorn can be said to have the properties x,y,z, without this implying its effective existence; it is possible to elaborate in detail what justice is, even if the world is fundamentally unjust. (Politis, Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms, 2021, pág. 11)

As Politis points out, the discussion at stake here lies in sustaining the possibility of a theory of essence that does not include a definition of substance and that presupposes the existence of a first principle, from which everything else originates; therefore, it is necessary to rescue the possibility of a different path from the Aristotelian one: "To assume this is to assume that there can be no theory of essence except in combination with a theory of primary being and the view that the primary beings are substances: a monumental assumption.". (Politis, Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms, 2021, pág. 12)

For a configuration of the sense of essence and form, this aspect will be crucial, especially because it allows the use of the notion of essence by removing the substantialist burden that is placed on it; even more, affirming the need for the correct use of the term essence, as we can see in authors such as Marx in the analysis of the form-value as foundation and essence, and in Spivak with his strategic use of the term essence. Therefore, the full validity of a non-substantialist essence, which allows the understanding of the same or similar phenomena, can be sustained; otherwise, reality would dissolve into the difference. Essence as form explains both sameness and difference. (Marx, 1975) (Spivak, 2012)

The question of forms, as essences that they are, is conceived in Plato in a differentiated way depending on the type of things that are being dealt with. Four spheres are distinguished: those things like unity and plurality, and justice, goodness, and goodness, which are independent of sensible perception, and which, in fact, cannot be grasped by the senses, but only by reasoning. We cannot observe the good, the truth, or the justice, because they are not a quality of sensible things; We can establish that a fact is just or unjust, but there is no justice as a universal. And the other two, which are certain attributes such as water or fire, and what are later called accidents, which are attached to things and cannot be separated from them.

In putting this question to Socrates – the question of whether, in regard of certain things, there are separate Forms of those things – Parmenides distinguishes between four sorts of things in regard of which this question can raised: i. Things such as likeness and unlikeness, unity and plurality: Are there separate Forms of those things, that is, separate from sense-perceptible things that are like or unlike each other, or that are unitary or not unitary? ii. Things such as justice, goodness, and beauty: Are there separate Forms of those things, that is, separate from sense-perceptible things that are just or good or beautiful? iii. Things such as water, fire or human beings: Are there separate Forms of those things, that is, separate from sense-perceptible fire, water and human beings? Finally, iv. Things such as mud, hair, and dirt: Are there separate Forms of those things, that is, separate from sense-perceptible mud, dirt, and hair?(Politis, Plato on Essences and Forms, 2025, pág. 489)

Of course, Plato does not arrive at the conception of forms that produce forms, although he has to admit that concrete things have forms and that these can be pointed out to answer the question What is it? This aspect of form theory will come much later, especially from the hand of George Spencer Brown.  Rather, it is recorded the variety of essences and the diversity of their relationships depending on the type of entities with which we are dealing, including those ideal principles such as goodness, truth and justice. (Spencer Brown, 1972)

The theory of the Platonic form, thus formulated, still poses challenges for its understanding and, above all, for its contemporary use. Politis points out the main characteristics of the form:

Forms are changeless, uniform, not perceptible by the senses, knowable only by reasoning, the basis of causation and explanation, distinct from sense-perceptible things, necessary for thought and speech, separate from physical things. (Politis, Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms, 2021, pág. 1)

At this point, it is interesting to deal with the first characteristic, because taking it as it is formulated, it leads to an unacceptable metaphysics, because it transforms the essence into something fixed and separate from reality, and could lead to it being interpreted as a substance: Forms are changeless. I return to the approaches of Néstor Luis Cordero, in order to analyze the changes that the theory of form undergoes in Plato, in the Parmenides and, especially, in the Sophist, which provide a distinct image of the form and introduce into it the possibility of movement and change. (Cordero, 2016) (Platón, Parménides, 1992) (Platón, Sofista, 1992)

The problems arise in Plato at the moment in which he tries to explain those aspects that are not compatible with the monistic vision derived from Parmenides, because the contrast between being is and non-being is not seems insurmountable: sameness and difference, unity and multiplicity, truth and falsehood, reason and sensibility, among others. In the final analysis, how can we explain that there are things that are, how can we say of something that is not, that it is?

Plato enters fully into the development of an ontology, maintaining the fundamental finding of essence as form, and its non-substantialist character. The passage from what is to what exists and how it exists, implies radical transformations in its conception of form. In this context, Plato explicitly formulates the relationship between form and being, because he discovers the form of being; or, in other words, that being is a form.

Ext. — The former, slipping into the darkness of non-being, actsin combinationwith it, and it is difficult to distinguish it because of the darkness of the place, is it not?

Teet. - It seems so.

Ext. -The philosopher, on the other hand, always relating himself to the form of being by means of reasoning, alsopoco is fáIt is easy to perceive, this time because of the luminosity of the region.ón. The eyes of the soul of most people, in fact, are incapable of striving to look at the divine. (254a) (Platón, Sofista, 1992, pág. 435)

 

In Cordero's terms, "the philosopher is an 'ontologist', an expert in the Form of Being, to the point of being 'clinging' to it", and this will be a crucial finding, because it allows, at the same time, to resolve the difficulties of a fixed form and confer movement on it, and, on the other hand, being as a form, to participate fully in its characteristics. Plato thus arrives at an ontology of form. (Cordero, 2016, pág. 175)

 

Being as a form has the capacity to communicate; In fact, communication is the way in which being gives existence to that which only had essence. The communicability of forms breaks his isolation and prepares him to fully explain the reality before him, such as the existence of movement and rest, or of unity and multiplicity. 

 

Ext. —Since it has been admitted that some genders agree to communicate with each other and others do not, that some do so with a few and others with many... (254b) (Platón, Sofista, 1992, pág. 435)

Conferring being is, above all, a movement of communication between forms; moreover, in the beautiful words of Cordero, communicates existence: "The Form of Being, as was the case with the Form of the Good, is functional, it does not have a precise essence (such as beauty, justA little girlñez): it is purely dynamic, it communicates existence". (Cordero, 2016, pág. 175)

Participation, which is another fundamental characteristic of forms, makes possible the relationship between elements that, otherwise, appear to be totally isolated and without the capacity to interrelate. In this way, the crucial question of the relationship between the intelligible and the sensible would remain unresolved. The ability to communicate includes participation; that is, the two planes participate in the form of being and, through it, manage to communicate.

Either Form participates, or it does not exist. And since the capacity to communicate (to act or to be affected) concerns everything, on pain of not existing, there is no longer any distinction – as we have seen – between the sensible and the intelligible. Through participation and presence, the sensible and the intelligible participate in many ways.tumente; thanks to communicationóNot recíproca the Forms communicate with each otherí (selectively, lólogically) and, without the need to justify it, since PlatóI didn't always admit itó, the sensible communicates with the sensible. (Cordero, 2016, pág. 176)

Plato is finally confronted with the problem of non-being, since he has admitted that non-being exists in some way. If being is sameness and non-being, what is different, what does non-being consist of? It insists on maintaining Parmenides' thesis that non-being is not; but a nuance is introduced that alters Parmenidean monism and opens it to the understanding of negativity.

Ext. — We must admit, then, and without getting angry, that change is the same and not the same. When we say that he is the same and not the same, we do not speak in the same sense, but we affirm that he is the same when we refer to his participation with the same in himself, and when we say that he is not-the-same, we allude to his communication with the different, thanks to which he separates himself from the same and becomes not the former.  but in something different. In this way, it is also correct to affirm that it is not-the-same. (256ab) (Platón, Sofista, 1992, pág. 443)

If it is maintained that non-being is not, what is it that is named as the non-same, that is, the non-being, the different. Plato introduces the relational variant of non-being: there is no such thing as non-being in general, but there are things that are not. In order that this may not lead to a contradiction, it is interpreted as one thing that is not in relation to another, although it, by itself, has its own essence. Thus, the non-white only exists in relation to the white, and could not be sustained in isolation.

The main consequence of the Foreigner's comment on the carácter relative of the Different (for nothing is Different in itselfí; A t is neededéThe term of comparison) will be the confirmation of the only predicative value of the non-being that will be reached... As Bluck (1975: 148) observed: "Cases of Difference are necessarily relative [relational] and, consequently, the Different in itself, qua paradigmatic norm [standard], is necessarily relative [relational]" (Cordero, 2016, pág. 185)

The turn incorporated by Plato allows, at the same time, to save Parmenides' premise, being is and non-being is not, and, on the other hand, to establish the mode of existence of things that are not. From a certain perspective, something can be said to be not, but only in relation to something that is. Negativity arises in opposition to a positivity that, as such, is already given. Thus, falsehood is the denial of a truth; but, if it were completely isolated, it would be meaningless.

The implications for the debates on nothingness, as a metaphysical resource that is repeated throughout the history of philosophy, reveal the absolute impossibility of nothingness; and that any discourse around it should be considered as the negation of everything that exists. Nothingness by itself is meaningless and nothing can be stated or predicated about it; on the other hand, it is possible to have a discourse or to endow it with a function if it is opposed to the given, effectively existing reality. This is the value of nihilism; and the marking of the limits of the apophatic pathways.

Synthetically, the findings of Plato's theory of form are:

The essence answers the question : what is it? And this is the core of its definition.

Essence is a form. Form and essence are the same.

The use of the term essence does not imply a substantialist conception of reality.

On the ontological plane, being is form: a way of being.

The main characteristics of the way of being are communicability and participation, which resolve the question of being and non-being; and, therefore, of movement and rest, unity and plurality, sensible and intelligible.

The essence answers the question : what is it? And this is the core of its definition.

Non-being is not; but there are things that are not. This non-being of things occurs only in relational terms. Non-being as such does not exist; something is not with respect to something that is, as its negation.

 

These elements must be taken into account, debated and transformed, in order to be integrated into a general theory of form, which is contemporary and which accounts for the current demands of this theory; For example, how can these Platonic considerations of essence and form be incorporated and redefined if form is claimed to be the introduction of a distinction? Can it be maintained that essence is that which introduces a distinction?

 

Bibliography

Aristóteles. (1994). Metafísica. (T. Calvo Martínez, Trans.) Madrid: Gredos.

Cordero, N. (2016). Platón contra Platón: La autocrítica del Parménides y la ontología del Sofista. Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires: Editorial Biblos.

Larsen, P., & Politis, V. (Eds.). (2025). The Platonic Mind. London; New York: Routledge.

Marx, K. (1975). El Capital (Vol. Tomo I/Vol.I). (P. Scaron, Trans.) México: Siglo XXI.

Platón. (1992). Parménides. In Platón, Diálogos (Vol. V, pp. 7-136). Madrid: Gredos.

Platón. (1992). Sofista. In Platón, Diálogos (Vol. V, pp. 319-482). Madrid: Gredos.

Politis, V. (2021). Plato's Essentialism: Reinterpreting the Theory of Forms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Politis, V. (2025). Plato on Essences and Forms. In P. Larsen, & V. Politis (Eds.), The Platonic Mind. London; New York: Routledge.

Spencer Brown, G. (1972). Laws of form. New York: Julian Press Inc.

Spivak, G. C. (2012). An aesthetic education in the era of globalization. Cambridge, MA.: Harvard University Press.

 

 

 

viernes, 10 de abril de 2026

THE BEARER SUBJECT IN EDWIG CONRAD-MARTIUS' PHENOMENOLOGY

 


The concept of bearer in phenomenological currents is linked to the formation of subjects and subjectivities and is particularly important because it allows us to unravel the complexities of their constitution. However, it is a term that has been little analyzed or used in other philosophical tendencies and, for that very reason, it is unknown. The term Carrier translates the Träger German and the Bearer English. In phenomenology, Edwig Conrad-Martius gives the term bearer a key centrality in his thought, an issue that will be examined in this work. (Seifert & Mbacké Gueye, 2009) (Miron, Hedwig Conrad-Martius: The Phenomenological Gateway to Reality, 2021)

Conrad-Martius's approaches open a space for debate in a context where postmodernity has been hegemonic, especially affecting the understanding of the construction of subjects in the contemporary world. It is possible to rethink subjectivities beyond the affirmations of their dissolution without a romantic return to the subjects of modernity. In addition, there is political responsibility in a world ravaged by the rise of fascism and in which actions of resistance in the public sphere are the order of the day. Although there is no reference or direct relationship, it should be noted that this notion of a bearer is used by Karl Marx in  (Conrad-Martius, Metaphysical Conversations and Phenomenological Essays, 2024) (Hart, 2020)Capital, without the term having been the subject of a solid analysis, despite its importance. (Marx, 1975)

The question of the bearer subject arises in Conrad-Martius in the perspective of the construction of his Realontologie, or the way in which all reality is constituted from itself, with no other foundation than itself. For this reason, he distinguishes within him three moments that underlie the formation of the real: the bearer, the essence and the manifestation of these two, which is, in the final analysis, reality.

Here already is the "fundamental movement" of the realontology: the founding of that which appears in itself from out of itself according to various modalities of selfrootedness. We have, therefore: (1) a substantial” moment (the bearer or object as bearer of predications), (2) an "essential" moment (the what or being-such), and (3) An "existential" moment (the presentation of the object as a union of the substantial and essential moments). (Hart, 2020, pág. 60)

Miron synthesizes the components of the phenomenon of carrying, which lies at the core of the relationship between essence and its expression.

Conrad-Martius' idea of reality assumes a fundamental structure of the real being. This structure is composed of two inseparable constituents: the essence (die Washeit) and the "bearer" (Träger) upon which the essence is "loaded". While the former embodies what she calls the "whatness" of the thing, the latter indicates the content of the real being. She establishes that when the essence constitutes itself, it personally carries a bearer, which is the filling with content of the real being, or alternatively the real is that which carries the essence that belongs to it and specifies it fundamentally. Indeed, the bearer is specified by the essence that is uploaded onto it and by which it exists. At the same time, the essence is carried to the extent that it specifies its bearer. Finally, the function of carrying is based on pure and "formal relations that cannot be destroyed" (1924: 223) to the extent that they should be regarded as "formally pointing out each other" and as "coming into being at the same time" (1924: 172).

(Miron, “Essence” (Wesenheit, Washeit) and “Bearer” (Träger) in Hedwig Conrad-Martius (1888–1966), 2020)

The structure of reality is given by the inseparable relationship between the essence and the bearer. The essence makes a thing what it is, as it is classically defined; but the novelty lies in the appearance of this carrier, which allows the essence to become a concrete reality and to be given as a phenomenon. In this way, the essence charges upon the bearer the actual contents of its being, and the bearer is specified or indexed by the essence. It is understood that the existence of the bearer depends on the essence, without clearly distinguishing the fact of creating the bearer from the process of charging him with certain attributes or characteristics that come from the what is of the essence.

The components that form the structure of reality are affirmed as permanent and universal: essence, carrier, charge, specification; that is, two elements: essence and carrier, and two movements: charge and specification, united by a necessary relationship. With this point by Miron, let us enter into the text of Conrad-Martius, Realontologie, where he develops these ideas extensively.  (Given the difficulty of locating this rather unknown text, I will quote it more extensively than usual.) (Conrad-Martius, Realontologie, 1924)

Conrad-Martius establishes, as a starting point, the ontological status of the bearer, because only when the essence charges the bearer is reality manifested in its specificity, which is the way in which things exist. Real entities are the product of the complete entry of what is of essence into a phenomenon that thus allows it to be and to be effectively. So the fundamental ontological question is to interrogate the essence that is carrying this carrier and that is presented to us in its corporeality.

11. When a truth comes to realization or becomes corporeal, a "bearer" is thus established to whom it is charged as the real content of existence. Or, to put it another way: when a truth is manifested through a carrier constituted in this way, it is the real content of existence and the whole is a real entity. (Conrad-Martius, Realontologie, 1924, pág. 167)

Let us now look at the ontological relationship that is established between essence and bearer, which has a correlate character; that is, the existence of the one implies the existence of the other. The need to define each one in terms of the other is imposed, because separately they lack meaning and existence. In the first place, there is the essence that necessarily manifests itself, and in the second place, the bearer that acquires real consistency or enters into existence, only in so far as it has been charged by its essence.

A real carrier becomes an entity by being charged with an essence; and an essence manifests as such when it corresponds to a factual carrier or a hypokeimenon. The hypokeimenon and the charged essence, or as we may now say, the charged essence, can only define each other and interdependently. One is nothing without the other. (Conrad-Martius, Realontologie, 1924, págs. 169-170)

Care must be taken not to confuse the processual explanation of this phenomenon with thinking that they are two separate moments in time; on the contrary, they are fully simultaneous. The factual carrier is defined by the essence that makes him what he is; and the essence exists only when it manifests itself in the bearer. Neither of the two moments exists before the other. They are the two sides of the same reality, in which the essence provides what is and the factual bearer is put as reality.

Conrad-Martius insists that the bearer is not a reality that exists previously and that comes to meet an essence; this implies an effective process of emergence of the real, which occurs precisely in the permanent conjunction of essence and factual bearer. The essence is charged to the bearer, but, in doing so, it makes the bearer a real entity; thus, the essence enters into the real constituting it.

On this ontological basis, Conrad-Martius advances to the elucidation of the bearer subject as the moment in which the truth of reality is realized as its most prominent point of arrival. The set of elements that have served to describe the relationship between the essence and the factual carrier, which are support, power, representation and charge, now find their expression in the self as a personal instance of truth. The phenomenology that corresponds to the real ontology postulates the existence of this process of constitution of the subject or the self.

To this end, when we speak of the peculiar relation between the real bearer and his own real truth in terms of  support, power, representation, and charge, what is found in these expressions as characteristic for the constitution of reality can also be fixed in a single concept more prominently and now centrally. The real is, through its pure being and being, a positive and personal realizer of its own truth or its own self. (Conrad-Martius, Realontologie, 1924, págs. 173-174)

In this real ontology of Conrad-Martius, the interrelation between essence and bearer leads to the discovery of a constitutive foundation, which is the self, in which reality becomes the practically realized truth. We are squarely on the plane of transcendental idealism in the Husserlian sense of the term, although here the author has passed from the cognitive to the ontological plane because the ego realizes truth not only as pure knowledge, but as a moment of reality itself.

The bearer has gone from being a merely formal subject to a subject in whom truth has been positively "realized" or, as one can also say, has been put into practice. Thus, we bring reality to an underlying constitutive foundation that constitutes it, and with this we have given the empty notion of reality the visual fullness that corresponds to it. The real is that which has been constitutively realized in one's own ego. (Conrad-Martius, Realontologie, 1924, págs. 173-174)

Beyond the debates on this particular phenomenological approach, it is interesting to maintain this central idea of the constitution of subjects and subjectivities, in the sense of carrying subjects who have been charged with an essence, from which they relate to power or represent their own conformation and the world in which they are immersed.

Or, in another way, when we analyze social subjects and people, we have to introduce the question of the burden that they carry, support, represent, and that makes them such subjects, insofar as they are the expression of an essence that is expressed in them. Of course, this is a non-substantialist essence, which is maintained only to the extent that it manifests itself and cannot be considered independently of the factual bearer.

Edwig Conrad-Martius starts from Husserl and, at the same time, distances himself from Husserl in some basic considerations, which would be unacceptable to him. The most important difference is in the ontological turn that he imprints on phenomenology and, later, on the articulation between the emergence of reality from itself and the constitution of the truth of the real in the self. (Breuer, Conrad-Martius: Sein, Wesen, Existenz. In Auseinandersetzung mit der Ontologie und Metaphysik Aristoteles', Thomas von Aquins und Husserls, 2021) (Breuer, Hedwig Conrad-Martius: The real reality of the sensuous appearance vs. the unreality of the artwork, 2023)

From this understanding of the relationship of the essence that burdens the bearer with what he is and turns him into a subject, first formal and then real, we can move towards other situations that are not taken into account by Conrad-Martius, but that have equal relevance. Maintaining the validity of the carrying subject, phenomena related to other modes of load that occur in reality can also be analyzed. I am referring, in a special way, to the situation in which the bearers are already given, whether collectively or individually. This is the most common and everyday fact, and here a new phenomenon arises: what happens when another essence is loaded into a factual carrier subject already given in advance? What series of transformations take place? In what way is the ontological status of the bearer subject altered by the entry of a new essence? Does this phenomenon occur irreversibly or, on the contrary, can it be done and undone over and over again?

It will be necessary to expand, in other studies, the analysis of the essential antagonisms that compete in the structuring of the bearer subjects and the different types of subjects and subjectivities that become real and position themselves as such; or, as Conrad-Martius would say, where a certain truth is realized. This diversity of essences that enter into a carrier subject will be particularly visible in Karl Marx's Capital.

Bibliography

Breuer, I. (2021). Conrad-Martius: Sein, Wesen, Existenz. In Auseinandersetzung mit der Ontologie und Metaphysik Aristotle', Thomas von Aquins und Husserls. Horizon. Studies in Phenomenology, 10(2), 360-397.

Breuer, I. (2023). Hedwig Conrad-Martius: The real reality of the sensuous appearance vs. the unreality of the artwork. NASEP.

Conrad-Martius, H. (1924). Realontologie. Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung, 6, 159-333.

Conrad-Martius, H. (2024). Metaphysical Conversations and Phenomenological Essays. (C. Gschwandtner, Ed.) Berlin: Walter de Gruyter GmbH.

Hart, J. (2020). Hedwig Conrad-Martius' Ontological Phenomenology. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

Marx, K. (1975). Capital (Vol. Volume I/Vol.I). Mexico: XXI Century.

Miron, R. (2020). "Essence" (Wesenheit, Washeit) and "Bearer" (Träger) in Hedwig Conrad-Martius (1888–1966). Retrieved from https://hwps.de/ecc/

Miron, R. (2021). Hedwig Conrad-Martius: The Phenomenological Gateway to Reality. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

Seifert, J., & Mbacké Gueye, C. (Eds.). (2009). Anthologie der realistischen Phänomenologie. Frankfurt: ontos Verlag.