Dictionary Definition
lightness
Noun
1 the property of being comparatively small in
weight; "the lightness of balsa wood" [syn: weightlessness] [ant:
heaviness]
2 the gracefulness of a person or animal that is
quick and nimble [syn: agility, legerity, lightsomeness, nimbleness]
3 having a light color [ant: darkness]
4 the visual effect of illumination on objects or
scenes as created in pictures; "he could paint the lightest light
and the darkest dark" [syn: light]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology 1
from light, the nounNoun
- the condition of being illuminated
- the relative whiteness or transparency of a colour
Etymology 2
from light, the adjectiveNoun
Extensive Definition
Lightness is a philosophical concept most
closely associated with continental
philosophy and existentialism, which is
used in ontology. The
term "lightness" varies in usage but is differentiated from
physical weight, such as "the lightness of balsa wood". In other
words, "light like a bird," as Paul
Valéry wrote, "and not like a feather".
Milan Kundera and Lightness
Milan
Kundera's 1984 novel
The Unbearable Lightness of Being is a vital exploration of the
concept of Lightness.
Kundera uses Friedrich
Nietzsche's doctrine of the Eternal
Return to illustrate Lightness. Eternal Return dictates that
all things in existence recur over and over again for all eternity.
This is to say that human history is a preset circle without
progress, the same events arising perpetually and doomed never to
alter or to improve. Existence is thus weighty because it stands
fixed in an infinite cycle. This weightiness is “the heaviest of
burdens”, for “if every second of our lives recurs an infinite
number of times, we are nailed to eternity as Jesus Christ
was nailed to the cross.” At the same time, it is necessary for any
event to occur in the cycle of events exactly as it has always
occurred for the cycle to be identical; consequently, everything
takes on an eternally fixed meaning. This fact prevents one from
believing things to be fleeting and worthless.
The inverse of this concept is Kundera's
“unbearable lightness of being.” Assuming that eternal return were
impossible, humankind would experience an “absolute absence of
burden,” and this would “[cause] man to be lighter than air” in his
lack of weight of meaning. Something which does not forever recur
has its brief existence, and, once it is complete, the universe
goes on existing, utterly indifferent to the completed phenomenon.
“Life which disappears once and for all, which does not return”
writes Kundera, is “without weight...and whether it was horrible,
beautiful, or sublime...means nothing.” Each life is insignificant;
every decision does not matter. Since decisions do not matter, they
are "light": they do not tie us down. However, at the same time,
the insignificance of our decisions - our lives, or being - is
unbearable. Hence, "the unbearable lightness of being." On the
other hand, eternal existence would demand of us strict adherence
to prescripted rules and laws; a sense of duty and rigorous
morality. "What then shall we choose? Weight or lightness?" Kundera
notes that this is not a new question. Parmenides posed
it in the sixth century BC. He saw the world divided into pairs of
opposites: light/darkness, fineness/coarseness etc. One half of the
opposition he called positive (light, fineness, warmth, being), the
other negative. We might find this division into positive and
negative poles simple except for one difficulty: which one is
positive, weight or lightness? Parmenides responded that lightness
is positive, weight negative. Kundera then questions "Was he
correct or not?" The lightness/weight opposition remains the most
ambiguous of all. Kundera then asks, should one live with weight
and duty or with lightness and freedom? In Nietzschean terms,
weight is life-affirming in that to live with positive intensity is
to live in a way you'd be prepared to repeat. The emptiness of
Sabina's life in 'The Unbearable Lightness Of Being', and that she
wanted to "die in lightness" — which is to say that she is
indifferent to her life — shows that she would not want to repeat
her life and would not accept an eternal return.
Italo Calvino and Lightness
Similarly to Greek philosopher Heraclitus, for
Italo
Calvino, Lightness is the flexible; the weightless; the mobile;
the connective; vectors as distinct from structures. Italo Calvino
explored Lightness in the first of his Six Memos For The Next
Millennium. He saw Lightness as an important aspect of post-modern
society and existence that should be celebrated; he, like
Heraclitus, never viewed Lightness as negative, indeed he never
ascribed any evaluative content to it.
Calvino keenly explores the borderline between
lightness and the superficial; he posits that a contemplative
lightness may make light-heartnedness seem heavy and dim; the
pursuit of lightness as a reaction to the dutifulness of
life.
Calvino emphasises that he does not intend to
exclude or to define as inferior the opposite, as for example
light/heavy, quick/slow; instant deduction is not necessarily
better than well-considered thought, the case may be even contrary.
It simply communicates something which is only emblematic of
lightness. The balance or tension between the two 'poles' is an
important aspect.
In Six Memos he says that "It is true that
software cannot exercise its powers of lightness except through the
weight of hardware. But it is the software that gives the orders,
acting on the outside world and on machines that exist only as
functions of software and evolve so that they can work out ever
more complex programs. The second industrial revolution, unlike the
first, does not present us with such crushing images as rolling
mills and molten steel, but with `bits' in a flow of information
traveling along circuits in the form of electronic impulses. The
iron machines still exist, but they obey the orders of weightless
bits."
Lightness in Eastern Philosophy
The Yoga
Sutras of Patanjali also deal with Lightness. Book 3 describes
Lightness or Laghima as being
one of the eight siddhis, or eight perfections: the capacity to
offset the force of one's facticity. This is defined in
relation to Pullness or Garima, which
concerns worldly weight and mass.
Zen Buddhism
teaches that one ought to become as light as being itself. Zen
teaches one not only to find the lightness of being “bearable,” but
to rejoice in this lightness. This stands as an interesting
opposition to Kundera's evaluation of Lightness.
See also
External links
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Munsell chroma, achroma, achromasia, achromatosis, agility, airiness, airy texture,
albescence, albinism, albino, albinoism, amiable weakness,
anemia, ashiness, attenuation, big deal,
blondness, bloodlessness, bounce, breakability, breeziness, brightness, brittleness, buoyancy, cadaverousness, canescence, carefreeness, chalkiness, chambering, changeableness, cheerfulness, chirpiness, chloranemia, chroma, chromatic color, chromaticity, collapse, color quality,
colorimetric quality, cool color, coquettishness, creaminess, daintiness, deathly hue,
deathly pallor, debonairness, delicacy, destructibility,
diaphanousness,
dilutedness,
dilution, dimness, disintegration, dullness, easy virtue, effeminacy, effervescence, elasticity, emptiness, ethereality, exiguity, exility, expansiveness, exsanguination, faddishness, faddism, fadedness, faintness, fairness, featliness, fickleness, fineness, flightiness, flimsiness, flippancy, fluffiness, foolishness, fragility, frailty, frangibility, frivolity, frivolousness, frostiness, frothiness, futility, gaiety, gauziness, ghastliness, glaucescence, glaucousness, gossameriness, gracility, grizzliness, haggardness, hoariness, hue, human frailty, hypochromia, hypochromic
anemia, idleness,
inanity, inconstancy, indecisiveness, infirmity
of will, inherent vice, insubstantiality,
irresolution,
jauntiness, laciness, lack of depth,
lactescence,
laxity, leukoderma, levity, light heart, lightheartedness,
lightsomeness,
liveliness, lividness, loose morals,
looseness, lucence, lucency, lucidity, luminosity, luminousness, mercuriality, mercurialness, milkiness, mistiness, moral weakness,
muddiness, neutral
color, nimbleness,
nugacity, paleness, pallidity, pallidness, pallor, paperiness, pastiness, pearliness, perkiness, pertness, prison pallor,
promiscuity,
purity, rarity, resilience, resiliency, sallowness, saturation,
shallow-wittedness, shallowness, sickliness, sickly hue,
silliness, silver, silveriness, skittishness, sleaziness, sleeping around,
slenderness,
slightness, slimness, snowiness, spryness, subtility, superficiality, swinging, tenuity, thinness, tint, tone, translucence, translucency, triflingness, triteness, triviality, trivialness, undependability,
unpredictability,
unprofoundness,
unprofundity,
unreliability,
unsubstantiality,
vacuity, vagueness, value, vanity, vapidity, velleity, vitiligo, vivacity, volatility, wanness, wantonness, warm color,
wateriness, waywardness, weakness, white, white race, whiteness, whitishness, whorishness, wispiness, womanishness