ABSTRACT

This chapter discusses Henry Maldiney's critique of Hegel's approach to deixis which lies at the core of the analysis of sensuous certainty in The Phenomenology of Spirit. Specifically, it analyses Maldiney's claim that deixis should not be considered separately from common sensuous and affective experience of the shared world and therefore from communication. The first section studies Erwin Straus's influence on Maldiney concerning the communicative character of sense experience. The second section exposes the logical structure of Hegel's experiment with writing down the statement “now is the night”. This experiment is related to the question of whether the adverbs here and now, as well as the personal pronoun I, have a general linguistic function discovered by Husserl, Jakobson and Benveniste. It transpires that Maldiney's analysis is incomplete; missing links to fix his argument are supplied. The last section is devoted to Maldiney's treatment of deixis and his concept of subjectivity that emerges when deictic expressions are used. I show that deictic expressions have certain features of a performative speech act. It is the explosive power of deixis that makes a simple communication exceed the framework of information exchange and become an encounter in which a new subject and a new world are born.