Phenomenology of Perception

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Motilal Banarsidass Publishe, 1996 - 466 страници
Buddhist philosophy of Anicca (impermanence), Dukkha (suffering), and
 

Съдържание

The Sensation as a Unit of Experience
5
Association and the Projection of Memories
13
Attention and Judgement
29
The Phenomenal Field
52
THE BODY
65
Experience and objective thought The problem of the body
67
The Body as Object and Mechanistic Physiology
87
The Experience of the Body and Classical Psychology
90
The theory of the body is already a theory of perception
203
Sense Experience
219
Space
227
The Thing and the Natural World
307
Other Selves and the Human World
346
BEINGFORITSELF AND BEINGINTHEWORLD
367
The Cogito
407
Temporality
422

The Spatiality of Ones own Body and Motility
133
The Synthesis of Ones own Body
149
The Body in its Sexual Being
154
The Body as Expression and Speech
181
THE WORLD AS PERCEIVED 33020 13 26 52
201

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Информация за автора (1996)

Appointed Professor at the College de France in 1952, Maurice Merleau-Ponty was a highly esteemed professional philosopher because of his technical works in phenomenology and psychology. He was also an activist commentator on the significant cultural and political events of his time, as well as a collaborator with Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir in the founding and editing of Les Temps Modernes in Paris immediately after World War II. Besides being influenced by Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty assimilated the contributions of experimental philosophy and Gestalt psychology to focus on perception and behavior. His work "The Structure of Behavior," although centering on the body, presented an interpretation of the distinctions among the mental, the vital (biological), and the physical that ruled out the reductionist inclinations of behaviorism. With the appearance of his work on the phenomenology of perception in 1945, his position as a philosopher ranking beside Heidegger and Sartre was established. He unveiled a theory of human subjectivity similar to theirs but with greater technical precision. From the standpoint of an existentialist thinker whose conception of subjectivity stressed the primacy of freedom, he examined Marxism and the political factions and movements fostered in the name of Karl Marx. The resulting studies, always insightful and provocative, satisfied neither the right nor the left. In the foreword to the English translation of Merleau-Ponty's inaugural lecture at the College de France, In Praise of Philosophy, John Wild and James Edie praised him for having made "important contributions to the phenomenological investigation of human existence in the life-world and its distinctive structures. He was a revolutionary, and his philosophy, even more than that of his French contemporaries, was a philosophy of the evolving, becoming historical present." Merleau-Ponty views man as an essentially historical being and history as the dialectic of meaning and non-meaning which is working itself out through the complex, unpredictable interaction of men and the world. Nothing historical ever has just one meaning; meaning is ambiguous and is seen from an infinity of viewpoints. He has been called a philosopher of ambiguity, of contradiction, of dialectic. His search is the search for "meaning."'

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