Who one is: 1 Meontology of the "I" : a transcendental phenomenology
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
[Berlin]
Springer
(2009)
|
Schriftenreihe: | Phaenomenologica
189 |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVI, 566 S. |
ISBN: | 9781402087974 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS PREFACE. VII ACKNOWLEDGJLLENTS XI I PBENOMENOLOGICAL
PRELIMINARIES......................................................... 1
§1 APPEARINGS, LOOKS, AND PHENOMENA 2 §2 APPEARINGS, EIDE, AND POSSIBLE
WORLDS 14 §3 POSSIBLE-WORLD TBEORY AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL EIDETIC
ANALYSIS... 25 §4 PERSPECTIVES, APPEARINGS AND
GIVENNESS......................................... 32 §5 GENERAL REMARKS
ABOUT THE PBENOMENOLOGICAL REDUCTION 36 §6 FURTHER PARALLEIS IN THE
NATURAL ATTITUDE.......................................... 41 §7
BRACKETING THE WORLD 49 §8 THE SETTING OF PHENOMENOLOGY 54 11 1BE FIRST
PERSON AND THE L RAMCENDENTALL........................................
65 § 1 THE ACHIEVEMENT OF F 65 §2 ON THE REDUCTION OF THE NOMINATIVE
TO THE ACCUSATIVE IN HENRY AND LEVINAS 80 §3 THE INELUCTABILITY OFI-NESS
IN AWARENESS AND SELF-AWARENESS....... 81 §4 THE TRANSCENDENTAL F : 1BE
DATIVE AND AGENT OF MANIFESTATION... 93 §5 DASEIN, BEING-IN-THE- WORLD,
AND MEONTOLOGY 100 §6 SELF-AWARENESS, SELF-BLINDNESS, AND 1BE
EXTEMUS HYPOTHESIS .. 105 §7 FIRST-PERSON
PERSPECTIVE...................................................................
118 A PERSPECTIVE 118 B UVED PERSPECTIVES ARE
FIRST-PERSONAL....................................... 118 C
TRANSCENDENTAL PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE FIRST-PERSON
PERSPECTIVE................................ 121 D CHISHOLM ON
SELF-PRESENTING ACTS 123 E A NOTE ON TENNINOLOGY 124 §8 RESSECTION AND
THE ITINERARY OF CONSCIOUSNESS................................. 125 §9
NON-ASCRIPTIVE REFERENCE OF F AND THE DEGENERATE-SOLILOQUISTIC
POSITION....... 127 XILI XIV CONTENTS M IPSEITY S OWNNESS AND UNIQUEOESS
133 §1 IPSEITY AS OWNNESS 133 §2 THE PARADOX OFTHE UNIVERSALITY OFTHE
UNIQUE I OFEACH PERSON 146 §3 A NOTE ON SOUL IN
HUSSERL............................................................ 151
§4 THE PURE
1.............................................................................
......... 156 §5 IPSEITY AND
PERSON.............................................................................
161 IV LOVE AS THE FUIFTLLMEOT OF THE SECOOD-PERSOO
PERSPECTIVE................. 173 PART ONE: THE SECOND-PERSON PERSPECTIVE
§ 1 GENERAL PROBLEMS OF REDUCIBILITY OF YOU TO ANOTHER PERSONAL FORM
173 §2 THE PRESENCE AND ABSENCE OF YOU IN SPEECH AND WRITING 174 §3
ILLOCUTIONS 178 §4 PROPER NAMES AND THE NON-ASCRIPTIVE REFERENCE OF
YOU 181 §5 THE REFERENT OF YOU AND THE
FACE.............................................. 185 §6 SOME MORE
PROBLEMS REGARDING THE PRESENCE AND THE REFERENT OF YOU
~............................. 188 §7 YOU AS IMPORTUNITY AND
INVOCATION 190 §8 SPEAKING ABOUT YOU IN YOUR PRESENCE AND WE 192 §9
PROBLEMS OFTALKING ABOUT YOU AND ME 193 §10 SUBSTITUTES FOR YOU
194 § 11 THE POSSIBILITY OF THE DISSIPATION OF THE PRONOMINAL RELATA BY
THE RELATIONS 196 §12 THE PROBLEM OF YOU AS ANOTHER I 197 §13 SOME
MORE MARCELIAN-BUBERIAN-LEVINASIAN-ORTEGIAN REFLECTIONS 200 PART TWO:
LOVE, PERSON, AND IPSEITY §14 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS ON LOVE
,............................................ 204 §15 LOVE, EMPATHIC
PERCEPTION AND EMOTION 206 §16 DOES LOVE AIM AT UNION WITH THE OTHER?
215 §17 LOVE IS NOT IN RESPECT OF THE QUALITIES OF THE
OTHER..................... 226 § 18 THE AFFIRMATION OF THE REALITY OF
THE OTHER IPSEITY IN LOVE AND HATE
......*.........................................................................
238 § 19 MORE ON THE RELATION OF THE QUALITIES OF THE PERSON TO THE
IPSEITY.......................................................................
241 §20 WHY ONE LOVES, WHY ONE IS
LOVED............................................. 248 §21 ONTOLOGICAL
VALUE OFLPSEITY.......................................................
253 §22 LOVE AND POLITICS 254 §23 CONCLUDING WITH THE HELP OF A FOIL 258
V OOTOLOGY AND MEOOTOLOGY
OFI-OESS..................................................... 269 §1 ON
KNOWING WHO I AM AND WHO KNOWS WHO I AM..................... 270 §2
INDIVIDUALITY AND INDIVIDUAL
ESSENCE............................................... 278 §3 I MYSELF
AS
SUBSTANCE...................................................................
300 §4 THE UNIQUENESS OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL I AND NUMERICAL IDENTITY 323
CONTENTS XV §5 A KANTIAN FOIL 333 §6 DA
CAPO..........................................................................
............... 337 VI THE PARADOXES OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON 345 §1
GENERAL REMARLCSABOUT PARADOX IN PHENOMENOLOGY 345 §2 THE FIRST-PERSON
AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL REGIONAL ONTOLOGY........ 348 §3 APORIAE AND
PARADOXES WITHIN REGIONAL ONTOLOGY 359 A THE CONTEMPORARY
SCENE........................................................ 359 B
BODILINESS AND MENTALITY 361 C PANPSYCHISM 365 D INDIVIDUATION FROM THE
REGIONAL-ONTOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE...... 367 E SPIRITUAL CAUSALITY 368 F
THE PROBLEM OF THE NATURAL SCIENTIFIC ACCOUNT OF ANIMATED
BEINGS.....................................................................
369 GAGAIN: THE PROBLEM OFTHE PSYCHO-PBYSICAL CONNECTION....... 372 H
CONSCIOUSNESS AND MEANING AS EPIPHENOMENA...................... 379 I
HILARY PUTNAM ON THE UNINTELLIGIBILITY OFTHE MENTAL............. 381 §4
SOME PARADOXES OF HUMAN SUBJECTIVITY IN REGARD TO NATURE AND
WORLD............................................................................
384 §5 THE SPATIALITY AND BODILINESS OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL
PERSON......... 393 §6 THE TRANSCENDENTAL
PERSON............................................................ 400
§7 INALIENABLE DIGNITY AND THE TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON 403 §8
TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON AS
MICROCOSM............................................ 409 §9
TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON AS NECESSARY BEING AND ESSENCE 411 VB THE DEATH
OFTHE TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON......................................... 423
§1 DEATH AND BIRTH IN THE NATURAL
ATTITUDE......................................... 423 §2 THE
TRANSCENDENTAL I AND THE AWARENESS OF INNER TLDLE................ 429 §3
THE NON-TEMPORAL CHARACTER OF THE AWARENESS OF TLDLE 433 §4 FREEDOM AND
LOVE S CONTEST WITH TEMPORALITY AND DEATH 438 §5 THE BEGINNINGLESSNESS
AND ENDLESSNESS OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL
I.............................................................................
442 VM THE AFTERLIFE AND THE TRANSCENDENTAL
I............................................ 453 § 1 WORDSWORTH AND
SCHOPENHAUER ON IGNORANCE OF PRE-EXISTENCE 454 §2 SLEEP AS A
TRANSCENDENTAL PBENOMENOLOGICAL THEME 459 §3 SLEEP AS THE BROTHER OF
DEATH 461 §4 VEDANTA AND HUSSERL ON CONSCIOUSNESS, SLEEP, AND
DEATH............ 475 §5 THE CONSERVATIONIST OPTIC 483 §6 CONCEIVING
PERSONALLMMORTALITY AND RESURRECTION: A STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND?
....................*.................................. 488 A
PERSONALLMMORTALITY AND FREE IMAGINATIVE VARIATION OF THE PERSON 488 B
BODILINESS AS A DETERMINING
FACTOR......................................... 491 C VARIATIONS IN
INTELLIGENCE.........................................................
493 XVI CONTENTS O VARIATIONS IN GENDER 495 E THE MORAL-PERSONAL
LDENTITY 496 F VARIATIONS IN THE SOCIAL-HISTORICAL WORLD 498 G H.H.
PRICE S SPIRITUALIST
AFTERLIFE............................................ 503 H THE
RESURRECTION OF THE BODY 508 I CONCLUSION 512 §7 ARISTOTELIANISM.
RESURRECTION, AND REINEAMATION: THE PROBLEM OF BEING A STRANGER TO
ONESELF IN A STRANGE LAND 513 §8 THE MYSELF, MEMORY AND THE AFTERLIFE
523 A A CRITICAL PASSAGE OF HUSSERL 523 B SOME PROBLEMS OF MEMORY IN
REGARD TO PERSONAL
REINCAMATION..........................................................................
525 C SHOEMAKER AND QUASI-MEMORY 527 O POSSIBLE- WORLD SPECULATION AND
THE DEATH OF PHENODLENOLOGICAL PHILOSOPHY 532 E MORE ON ONE S BEING
REBOM WITBOUT REMEMBERING WBO ONE 18 :......................... 5.34 F
CONCLUSION....................................................................
........... 539 BIBLIOGRAPHY 545
INDEX................................................................................................................
555
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS PREFACE. VII ACKNOWLEDGJLLENTS XI I PBENOMENOLOGICAL
PRELIMINARIES. 1
§1 APPEARINGS, LOOKS, AND PHENOMENA 2 §2 APPEARINGS, EIDE, AND POSSIBLE
WORLDS 14 §3 POSSIBLE-WORLD TBEORY AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL EIDETIC
ANALYSIS. 25 §4 PERSPECTIVES, APPEARINGS AND
GIVENNESS. 32 §5 GENERAL REMARKS
ABOUT THE PBENOMENOLOGICAL REDUCTION 36 §6 FURTHER PARALLEIS IN THE
NATURAL ATTITUDE. 41 §7
BRACKETING THE WORLD 49 §8 THE SETTING OF PHENOMENOLOGY 54 11 1BE FIRST
PERSON AND THE 'L'RAMCENDENTALL.
65 § 1 THE ACHIEVEMENT OF "F' 65 §2 ON THE REDUCTION OF THE NOMINATIVE
TO THE ACCUSATIVE IN HENRY AND LEVINAS 80 §3 THE INELUCTABILITY OFI-NESS
IN AWARENESS AND SELF-AWARENESS. 81 §4 THE "TRANSCENDENTAL F': 1BE
DATIVE AND AGENT OF MANIFESTATION. 93 §5 DASEIN, BEING-IN-THE- WORLD,
AND "MEONTOLOGY" 100 §6 SELF-AWARENESS, SELF-BLINDNESS, AND ''1BE
EXTEMUS HYPOTHESIS" . 105 §7 FIRST-PERSON
PERSPECTIVE.
118 A PERSPECTIVE 118 B UVED PERSPECTIVES ARE
FIRST-PERSONAL. 118 C
TRANSCENDENTAL PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE FIRST-PERSON
PERSPECTIVE. 121 D CHISHOLM ON
SELF-PRESENTING ACTS 123 E A NOTE ON TENNINOLOGY 124 §8 RESSECTION AND
THE ITINERARY OF CONSCIOUSNESS. 125 §9
NON-ASCRIPTIVE REFERENCE OF "F' AND THE DEGENERATE-SOLILOQUISTIC
POSITION. 127 XILI XIV CONTENTS M IPSEITY'S OWNNESS AND UNIQUEOESS
133 §1 IPSEITY AS OWNNESS 133 §2 THE PARADOX OFTHE UNIVERSALITY OFTHE
UNIQUE I OFEACH PERSON 146 §3 A NOTE ON "SOUL" IN
HUSSERL. 151
§4 THE "PURE"
1.
. 156 §5 IPSEITY AND
PERSON.
161 IV LOVE AS THE FUIFTLLMEOT OF THE SECOOD-PERSOO
PERSPECTIVE. 173 PART ONE: THE SECOND-PERSON PERSPECTIVE
§ 1 GENERAL PROBLEMS OF REDUCIBILITY OF "YOU" TO ANOTHER PERSONAL FORM
173 §2 THE PRESENCE AND ABSENCE OF "YOU" IN SPEECH AND WRITING 174 §3
ILLOCUTIONS 178 §4 PROPER NAMES AND THE NON-ASCRIPTIVE REFERENCE OF
"YOU" 181 §5 THE REFERENT OF "YOU" AND THE
FACE. 185 §6 SOME MORE
PROBLEMS REGARDING THE PRESENCE AND THE REFERENT OF "YOU"
~. 188 §7 "YOU" AS IMPORTUNITY AND
INVOCATION 190 §8 SPEAKING ABOUT YOU IN YOUR PRESENCE AND "WE" 192 §9
PROBLEMS OFTALKING ABOUT "YOU" AND "ME" 193 §10 SUBSTITUTES FOR "YOU"
194 § 11 THE POSSIBILITY OF THE DISSIPATION OF THE PRONOMINAL RELATA BY
THE RELATIONS 196 §12 THE PROBLEM OF "YOU" AS ANOTHER "I" 197 §13 SOME
MORE MARCELIAN-BUBERIAN-LEVINASIAN-ORTEGIAN REFLECTIONS 200 PART TWO:
LOVE, PERSON, AND IPSEITY §14 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS ON LOVE
,. 204 §15 LOVE, EMPATHIC
PERCEPTION AND EMOTION 206 §16 DOES LOVE AIM AT UNION WITH THE OTHER?
215 §17 LOVE IS NOT IN RESPECT OF THE QUALITIES OF THE
OTHER. 226 § 18 THE AFFIRMATION OF THE REALITY OF
THE OTHER IPSEITY IN LOVE AND HATE
.*.
238 § 19 MORE ON THE RELATION OF THE QUALITIES OF THE PERSON TO THE
IPSEITY.
241 §20 WHY ONE LOVES, WHY ONE IS
LOVED. 248 §21 "ONTOLOGICAL
VALUE" OFLPSEITY.
253 §22 LOVE AND POLITICS 254 §23 CONCLUDING WITH THE HELP OF A FOIL 258
V OOTOLOGY AND MEOOTOLOGY
OFI-OESS. 269 §1 ON
KNOWING WHO I AM AND WHO KNOWS WHO I AM. 270 §2
INDIVIDUALITY AND INDIVIDUAL
ESSENCE. 278 §3 "I MYSELF'
AS
SUBSTANCE.
300 §4 THE UNIQUENESS OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL I AND NUMERICAL IDENTITY 323
CONTENTS XV §5 A KANTIAN FOIL 333 §6 DA
CAPO.
. 337 VI THE PARADOXES OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON 345 §1
GENERAL REMARLCSABOUT PARADOX IN PHENOMENOLOGY 345 §2 THE FIRST-PERSON
AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL REGIONAL ONTOLOGY. 348 §3 APORIAE AND
PARADOXES WITHIN REGIONAL ONTOLOGY 359 A THE CONTEMPORARY
SCENE. 359 B
BODILINESS AND MENTALITY 361 C PANPSYCHISM 365 D INDIVIDUATION FROM THE
REGIONAL-ONTOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE. 367 E SPIRITUAL CAUSALITY 368 F
THE PROBLEM OF THE NATURAL SCIENTIFIC ACCOUNT OF ANIMATED
BEINGS.
369 GAGAIN: THE PROBLEM OFTHE PSYCHO-PBYSICAL CONNECTION. 372 H
CONSCIOUSNESS AND MEANING AS EPIPHENOMENA. 379 I
HILARY PUTNAM ON THE UNINTELLIGIBILITY OFTHE MENTAL. 381 §4
SOME PARADOXES OF HUMAN SUBJECTIVITY IN REGARD TO NATURE AND
WORLD.
384 §5 THE SPATIALITY AND BODILINESS OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL
PERSON. 393 §6 THE TRANSCENDENTAL
PERSON. 400
§7 INALIENABLE DIGNITY AND THE TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON 403 §8
TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON AS
MICROCOSM. 409 §9
TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON AS NECESSARY BEING AND ESSENCE 411 VB THE DEATH
OFTHE TRANSCENDENTAL PERSON. 423
§1 DEATH AND BIRTH IN THE NATURAL
ATTITUDE. 423 §2 THE
TRANSCENDENTAL I AND THE AWARENESS OF INNER TLDLE. 429 §3
THE NON-TEMPORAL CHARACTER OF THE AWARENESS OF TLDLE 433 §4 FREEDOM AND
LOVE'S CONTEST WITH TEMPORALITY AND DEATH 438 §5 THE BEGINNINGLESSNESS
AND ENDLESSNESS OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL
I.
442 VM THE AFTERLIFE AND THE TRANSCENDENTAL
I. 453 § 1 WORDSWORTH AND
SCHOPENHAUER ON IGNORANCE OF PRE-EXISTENCE 454 §2 SLEEP AS A
TRANSCENDENTAL PBENOMENOLOGICAL THEME 459 §3 SLEEP AS THE BROTHER OF
DEATH 461 §4 VEDANTA AND HUSSERL ON CONSCIOUSNESS, SLEEP, AND
DEATH. 475 §5 THE CONSERVATIONIST OPTIC 483 §6 CONCEIVING
PERSONALLMMORTALITY AND RESURRECTION: A STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND?
.*. 488 A
PERSONALLMMORTALITY AND FREE IMAGINATIVE VARIATION OF THE PERSON 488 B
BODILINESS AS A DETERMINING
FACTOR. 491 C VARIATIONS IN
INTELLIGENCE.
493 XVI CONTENTS O VARIATIONS IN GENDER 495 E THE MORAL-PERSONAL
LDENTITY 496 F VARIATIONS IN THE SOCIAL-HISTORICAL WORLD 498 G H.H.
PRICE'S SPIRITUALIST
AFTERLIFE. 503 H THE
RESURRECTION OF THE BODY 508 I CONCLUSION 512 §7 ARISTOTELIANISM.
RESURRECTION, AND REINEAMATION: THE PROBLEM OF BEING A STRANGER TO
ONESELF IN A STRANGE LAND 513 §8 THE "MYSELF," MEMORY AND THE AFTERLIFE
523 A A CRITICAL PASSAGE OF HUSSERL 523 B SOME PROBLEMS OF MEMORY IN
REGARD TO PERSONAL
REINCAMATION.
525 C SHOEMAKER AND "QUASI-MEMORY" 527 O POSSIBLE- WORLD SPECULATION AND
THE DEATH OF PHENODLENOLOGICAL PHILOSOPHY 532 E MORE ON ONE'S BEING
REBOM WITBOUT REMEMBERING WBO ONE 18 :. 5.34 F
CONCLUSION.
. 539 BIBLIOGRAPHY 545
INDEX.
555 |
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spelling | Hart, James G. Verfasser aut Who one is 1 Meontology of the "I" : a transcendental phenomenology [Berlin] Springer (2009) XVI, 566 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Phaenomenologica 189 Phaenomenologica ... (DE-604)BV035002710 1 Phaenomenologica 189 (DE-604)BV026062935 189 Digitalisierung UB Erlangen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016672097&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Hart, James G. Who one is Phaenomenologica |
title | Who one is |
title_auth | Who one is |
title_exact_search | Who one is |
title_exact_search_txtP | Who one is |
title_full | Who one is 1 Meontology of the "I" : a transcendental phenomenology |
title_fullStr | Who one is 1 Meontology of the "I" : a transcendental phenomenology |
title_full_unstemmed | Who one is 1 Meontology of the "I" : a transcendental phenomenology |
title_short | Who one is |
title_sort | who one is meontology of the i a transcendental phenomenology |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016672097&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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