The Sublime Beyond Terror

A skeletal figure with vibrant red hair, wearing a black outfit, plays a violin amidst floating rocks in a space-like environment with swirling orange, blue, and green colors. A large celestial body is visible in the background.

What the Vastness Actually Reveals


A word of departure: those who visit this site regularly will know it primarily as a home for paintings. That remains true, and it will continue to be so. Some months ago, however, I closed my Substack and made the decision to consolidate all of my work (visual, musical, philosophical) under one roof here at robmedley.com. The hope is for the visitor to gain deeper insight into what makes up the character that is Rob Medley. The categories are now separated so that visitors may find their way according to their own interests without wading through territory that does not concern them. This post belongs to the Philosophy category. If it is not what you came for, the paintings remain where they always were. If it is a curiosity, welcome to a somewhat different kind of conversation.


There is a moment, familiar to any person who has stood at the edge of something genuinely immeasurable, when the mind does not so much comprehend what it faces as register its own inability to do so. The cliff does not instruct you – it simply exceeds you. And in that excess, something curious occurs. The experience is not pleasant, not in any ordinary sense. Yet one does not flee. One stands, and something in the standing matters enormously.

This is the territory the philosophical tradition has called the sublime, and it is among the most persistently misunderstood concepts in Western aesthetic thought.

The Long History of Vastness

Longinus, writing in the first century, identified the sublime, hypsos, as a quality of speech and thought that strikes like a bolt of lightning, that overwhelms rather than persuades. His was a rhetorical category, concerned with greatness of soul made manifest in language. The vast, for Longinus, was not a landscape feature; it was a register of mind.

Edmund Burke, writing in 1757, brought the sublime decisively into the realm of sensation. His Philosophical Enquiry located the experience in astonishment, “that state of mind in which all its motions are suspended, with some degree of horror.” Terror, he argued, was the ruling principle. Obscurity, infinity, vastness, darkness, and power: these were the conditions under which the sublime operated, because they threatened, however distantly, the organism’s sense of its own continuity.

Burke’s account remains the more viscerally accurate description of what the experience feels like in its first moment. The Kantian resolution came later, and it came at the cost of a certain phenomenological honesty.

A skeletal figure with vibrant red hair, wearing a black outfit, plays a violin amidst floating rocks in a space-like environment with swirling orange, blue, and green colors. A large celestial body is visible in the background.

The Kantian Turn, and Its Ambiguity

In the Critique of Judgment, Kant distinguished between the mathematical sublime, the overwhelming of imagination by sheer magnitude, and the dynamical sublime, the encounter with forces so great that physical resistance would be futile. In both cases, the experience begins in inadequacy. Nature, or number, or power defeats the senses.

The resolution Kant proposed is the hinge upon which everything philosophical turns: the defeat of the senses reveals the dignity of reason. We cannot imagine a true infinity; we can think one. In that gap, Kant argued, we discover our supersensible vocation, the fact that we are not merely natural creatures subject to natural forces, but beings capable of apprehending what surpasses nature. The vastness humbles the body and elevates the mind.

This is a genuinely extraordinary claim, and it is not without difficulty. The elevation Kant describes risks becoming self-congratulation, the universe overwhelms me, therefore I am noble. The movement from cosmic awe to anthropocentric reassurance is, philosophically speaking, somewhat too convenient.

What the Sublime Actually Points Toward

Rudolf Otto, in Das Heilige (1917), recovered something closer to the original phenomenological texture. His concept of the numinous, the encounter with what he termed the mysterium tremendum et fascinans, the mystery that at once terrifies and draws, resists the Kantian rescue operation. The numinous is not a mirror for human reason. It is genuinely other. It exceeds not only the senses but the categories by which the mind attempts to contain experience.

This is the honest account. The sublime, in its authentic form, is not ultimately about the discovery of human greatness. It is about the recognition of a genuine alterity – something that stands outside the circuit of human meaning-making, that does not require our apprehension to be what it is.

The question this raises is not a comfortable one: if the sublime points toward something genuinely other than the human, what relationship is possible with that otherness? Flight is the obvious response, and the one most cultural frameworks tacitly endorse. One admires the mountain and descends to the village.

The Contemplative Alternative

There exists, however, a tradition, poorly represented in mainstream Western philosophy, though present in Hermetic, Gnostic, and various non-Western frameworks, that does not regard the encounter with the radically vast as a terminus. It regards it as a threshold.

The difference is not a matter of courage, exactly. It is a matter of orientation. The tourist at the cliff edge experiences the sublime as something that happens to a self that remains fundamentally intact throughout. The contemplative practitioner asks a different question: what if the self that feels overwhelmed is not the final word on what one is?

This is the inquiry the Codex of the Outer Realms was written to pursue. The entities at its center, drawn from the Lovecraftian cosmological tradition, though treated here as philosophical and contemplative frameworks rather than fictional horrors, are precisely the kind of radical alterity the sublime points toward. Azathoth is not comprehensible. Yog-Sothoth does not resolve into familiar categories. Nyarlathotep does not offer consolation.

What they offer, approached through the lens of genuine philosophical inquiry rather than either horror or dismissal, is the thing the sublime has always offered in its most honest form: the dissolution of the assumption that human scale is the measure of what is real.

This is not a comfortable teaching. It was never meant to be. The sublime, properly understood, was never comfort. It was the first honest encounter with the actual dimensions of existence — and the beginning, for those who do not look away, of something that might cautiously be called wisdom.


Further Reading

The primary sources referenced in this essay are available in full, without cost, through Project Gutenberg and the Internet Archive.

LonginusOn the Sublime (c. 1st century CE), translated by H.L. Havell, with an introduction by Andrew Lang: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/17957/17957-h/17957-h.htm

Edmund BurkeA Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757), first edition facsimile: https://archive.org/details/philosophicalenq00burkrich

Immanuel KantCritique of Judgement (1790), translated by J.H. Bernard: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/48433

Rudolf OttoThe Idea of the Holy (1917; English translation 1923), translated by John W. Harvey, Oxford University Press edition: https://archive.org/details/ideaofholyinquir0000otto_k1y1


The Codex of the Outer Realms is a five-volume philosophical series. Volume information and purchasing details are available here.