: On this skin, a profound philosophical text carries no more inherent "weight" than a flicker of light in a film; both are simply intensities of energy.
The "Great Ephemeral Skin" challenges us to move beyond "representation." If there is no "truth" hidden deep inside, then art must be judged by its affect —the way it moves the viewer's own "skin."
: The skin suggests a world where humans are not separate from their tools. We are "unthreaded" and "put back together" by our machines, becoming part of a larger, global metainterface. Conclusion
: Just as Lyotard’s skin is subject to constant folding and tearing, a digital video file is a compression of light and time. It is a temporary "mask" of reality that exists only when powered by a computer.
: The act of watching—whether it is stars in a night sky or a video on a screen—integrates the observer into the skin. The "surreal" feeling of being "in the moment" is the feeling of the skin’s intensity before it shifts again. III. Aesthetic and Ethical Implications
In the mid-1970s, Jean-François Lyotard broke away from traditional Marxism and psychoanalysis to propose a radical "libidinal" philosophy. At the heart of this shift lies the "Great Ephemeral Skin"—a vast, undulating surface that encompasses all of reality. Unlike the "depth" sought by traditional hermeneutics, which looks for hidden meanings beneath the surface, Lyotard’s skin suggests that the meaning is the surface. Everything—from a political protest to a digital video file—is a "patch" on this skin, vibrating with energy before fading away. I. The Architecture of the Skin
: The skin is "ephemeral" because it is always being torn, stitched, and reconfigured. As seen in artistic interpretations, this surface often reveals "scars" that heal into new, slightly different textures each time they are washed. II. The Digital Ephemeral: The .mp4 as a Libidinal Patch
This paper examines the concept of the "Great Ephemeral Skin" as proposed by Jean-François Lyotard, particularly in the context of his work Libidinal Economy . It explores how this "skin" functions as a metaphorical surface of intensity where desires, sensations, and signs collide without hierarchy. By analyzing the transition from structuralist depth to post-structuralist surfaces, the paper discusses the implications of an "ephemeral" reality on modern art, media (specifically the .mp4 or digital format), and the human experience of time. Introduction