Body and World
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패키지
북카드
"A much needed and insightful account that stays with the phenomenological evidence, a rich phenomenological resource." Shaun Gallagher The Times Literary (UK) "How did masturbation, arguably the safest sexual act, come to be seen as a moral aberration with ghastly physical effects? Laqueur is persuasive. An engaging writer." Briefly Noted The New Yorker
작가정보
저자(글) Todes, Samuel
목차
- Foreword xi
Hubert L. Dreyfus
Introduction I: Todes's Account of xv
Nonconceptual Perceptual Knowledge and Its
Relation to Thought
Hubert L. Dreyfus
Introduction II: How Todes Rescues xxviii
Phenomenology from the Threat of Idealism
Piotr Hoffman
Author's Introduction 1 (9)
The Classic View of the Way the Human Subject 10 (13)
Has His Body, and Descartes's Rejection of It
The Classic View 10 (3)
Descartes's Rejection of the Classic View 13 (10)
The discovery of human necessity, and its 13 (1)
first consequences for the philosophy of
the body
The ambiguity of Descartes's version of 14 (7)
the human subject
Summary of Descartes's view 21 (2)
Critique of the Resulting World-Subject of 23 (67)
Leibniz and Hume, with an Introductory
Exposition of the Thesis That the Human Body
Is the Material Subject of the World
The Mitosis of Cartesian Philosophy 23 (1)
A New Consensus: The Human Subject as 23 (4)
Explicating the Unity of the World
The Change in the Sense of the 27 (2)
``Representational'' Character of Experience
The Human Body Veiled 29 (15)
Leibniz's veiling of the human body 30 (10)
Hume's veiling of the human body 40 (4)
Phenomenological Interlude 44 (27)
Body feelings as objects 44 (2)
The three functions of the body of the 46 (1)
active subject
The body as an object 47 (1)
Space and time as correlates of the 48 (4)
active subject's body
A note on method 52 (5)
Types of spatiotemporal emptiness 57 (1)
Satisfaction 58 (1)
Pain 59 (1)
Disappearance 60 (1)
Antifacts 61 (1)
Responsiveness 62 (9)
Re-consideration of Hume 71 (16)
The nonvariability of the human body 71 (1)
unnoticed by Hume
Observation, perceptual inference, and 71 (1)
poise: Hume's view criticized
Critique of Hume on pleasure and pain 72 (1)
Critique of Hume on the uniformity of 73 (10)
nature
Critique of Hume on the foundation of 83 (1)
probability
Clarification of Hume's view of belief 84 (1)
The problem of the continued existence of 85 (1)
unobserved objects
Hume's admission of an inadequate account 86 (1)
of the active life
Conclusion 87 (1)
Transition to Chapter 3 88 (2)
Introductory Discussion of Kant's View That 90 (12)
the Human Subject Makes the World of His
Experience
The Development of Kant's Thought 90 (5)
Summary of My Kant Criticism: That Kant 95 (5)
Imaginizes Perception
Phenomenological Studies To Be Used in 100 (2)
Support of My Kant Criticism
Development of the Phenomenology of Practical 102 (28)
Perception, as a Prelude to the Criticism
That Kant Imaginizes Perception
General Statement of Problems Considered in 102 (5)
This Chapter, and of the Conclusions To Be
Demonstrated
Defense against Aristotle's Thesis That a 107 (3)
Self-Moved Mover Is Impossible
The Perceptual Sense of the Passage of 110 (4)
Time: A Correlate of the Self-Activity of
the Percipient
The Perceptual World as a Field of 114 (3)
Fields-within-Fields: The General
Significance of This Fact, and the
Significance of the Particular Order of
Field-Inclusion
Why the Percipient Is Satisfied with the 117 (13)
Perception of an Object; How It Fulfills
His Active Body
The bodily basis of the irreversibility 118 (1)
of perceptual time
How passing an object enables the 119 (3)
percipient to determine it as a concrete
unity
The vertical field 122 (6)
Perceptual fulfillment as practical 128 (2)
self-composure
The Phenomenology of Imagination, as a Final 130 (25)
Prelude to the Criticism that Kant Imaginizes
Perception
Introduction: Restriction of the Topic 130 (8)
Restriction of the topic in respect to 133 (2)
the mediation of perception and
imagination by inactive spectation
Restriction of the topic in respect to 135 (2)
the fusion of perception and imagination
in imaginative perception
Restriction of the topic to the single 137 (1)
modality of conceptual imagination
The Imaginative Transformation of Our 138 (5)
Relation to the World
Our imaginative capacity is its own 139 (1)
initial field of productivity
The imaginative transformation of balance 140 (3)
and poise
The New Kind of Series Possible in the 143 (2)
World of Imagination
The World of Imagination as a Field of 145 (4)
Explicatable Images instead of Determinable
Objects
The Imaginative Transformation of the 149 (4)
Extent to Which the World Can Be Filled
The Imaginative Transformation of Our Role 153 (1)
in Contributing Significance to Our
Experience
Summary of the Main Contrasts between 154 (1)
Imagination and Perception
Development of the Thesis That the Human Body 155 (107)
Is the Material Subject of the World, as a
Critique of Kant's View That the Human
Subject Makes the World of His Experience
The Critique of Pure Reason in the Light of 155 (1)
a Phenomenology of Impure Experience
Kant's False Dilemma of A Priori Knowledge: 156 (5)
How It Arises from Imaginizing the World
The Ego, According to Kant: Its Three 161 (12)
Stages of Self-Evidence
Phenomenological Criticism: Kant Imaginizes 173 (8)
the Ego
Kant's View of Spatial Objects: 181 (8)
Spatialization as Conceptualization
The Missing Perceptual Stage: How Is a 189 (10)
Local Object Determinable?
The ``Common, but to Us Unknown, Root'' 199 (3)
Kantian Categories as Imaginative 202 (27)
Idealizations of Perceptual Categories
Deduction of perceptual categories from 202 (18)
the felt unity of the active body, as
Kant deduces imaginative categories from
the transcendental unity of apperception
The concept of nothing (= 0) versus the 220 (9)
perceptual sense of nothing (= -x)
Kant's Dialectic: Perception Takes Revenge 229 (30)
The antinomies of the Paralogisms: the 239 (4)
suppressed perceptual thesis vs. the
imaginative antithesis
The perceptual thesis vs. the imaginative 243 (13)
antithesis of Kant's Antinomies; or, the
fruitless question: Which form of
objectivity is the right one?
The antinomies of the Ideal of pure 256 (3)
reason: the suppressed perceptual thesis
versus the imaginative antithesis
Summary, and Concluding Remarks 259 (3)
General Conclusion 262 (1)
Appendix I: The Subject Body in Perception and 263 (6)
Conception: A Brief Sketch
Appendix II: Sensuous Abstraction and the 269 (8)
Abstract Sense of Reality
Appendix III: Anticipatory Postscript 277 (16)
Notes 293 (26)
Index 319
기본정보
ISBN | 9780262700825 ( 0262700824 ) |
---|---|
발행(출시)일자 | 2001년 04월 27일 |
쪽수 | 383쪽 |
크기 |
152 * 229
* 20
mm
/ 512 g
|
총권수 | 1권 |
언어 | 영어 |
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