ONLINE FIRST
published on February 11, 2022
Cecilia Sj?holm

https://doi.org/10.5840/epoche202224206
Figures of Snow
Preconceptual Dimensions of Descartes¡¯s Meteorology
In times of climate change and unpredictable variations in weather conditions, not least in the climate of the North, Descartes¡¯s treatise on Meteorology, published with Discourse on Method in 1637, has gained new relevance. He presents us with the kind of transformations that a Northern climate in particular materializes: weather consisting of small particles changing in shape and movement, intertwining, interfering and reorganising. This article argues that the Cartesian ¡°figures¡± of the essay can be seen as philosophical thought-images of a preconceptual dimension of experience that abstract language fails to seize. In this way, they point to a dimension in Descartes¡¯s philosophy that has been little commented upon, a tool of aesthetic approximation that lies between the res extensa and the res cogitans, a philosophical methodology using images explicitly appreciated by Descartes. The article links the use of images to the epistemological concept of ¡°figure¡±, used to describe phenomena of the atmosphere that may be described as rhythmic. Here the analysis takes recourse to Maurice Merleau-Ponty¡¯s analysis of figural extension.