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Introduction to a Phenomenology of Life

Combining original interpretations and expert readings of philosophers such as Kant and Husserl and contemporary thinkers such as Bergson, Badiou, and Deleuze, Barbaras offers here a powerful and important contribution to phenomenology and continental thought.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Barbaras, Renaud
Otros Autores: Lawlor, Leonard
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bloomington : Indiana University Press, 2022.
Colección:Studies in Continental Thought Series.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Translator's Note
  • Introduction: Phenomenology and Life
  • The Correlational A Priori and the Ontological Meaning of the Subject
  • The Original Status of Being-Alive
  • Part 1. The Divisions of Life
  • 1.1. Exteriority and Immanence
  • Life as It Is Known
  • Life as It Is Lived
  • Auto-Affection, Life, and Flesh
  • The Problem of the Body
  • 1.2. Existence and Incarnation
  • The Privative Approach to Life
  • The Intramundanity of Dasein
  • The Problem of Privative Zoology
  • Heidegger and Metaphysical Humanism
  • Incarnate Life
  • One's Own Body
  • Flesh and Chiasm
  • 1.3. The Division of Movement
  • The Structure of Appearing and the Incarnation of Dasein
  • Super-Objectivity and Hyper-Belonging-To
  • The Ontological Meaning of the Ego
  • Dynamic Phenomenology
  • Movement and the Body of Existence
  • Perception and Movement
  • The Division of the Movements
  • Conclusion: The Epoche of Death
  • Life and Existence
  • The Ontology of Death
  • Part 2. Life and Exteriority
  • Introduction: The Failure of Bergsonism
  • Life and Consciousness
  • The Two Meanings of Life
  • Human Life
  • 2.1. The Absolute Domains of Survey
  • The Three Paths to Gaining Access to Absolute Surfaces
  • The Phenomenal Path
  • The Biological and Metaphysical Paths
  • Primary Consciousness and Secondary Consciousness
  • The Problem of Perceptual Intentionality
  • Consciousness and Extension
  • 2.2. Metabolism
  • Vital Activity
  • Methodological Anthropocentrism and Ontological Biocentrism
  • Metabolism and Interiority
  • Exteriority and Sensibility
  • The Problem of Exteriority
  • Need and Exteriority
  • The Ontological Irreducibility of Movement
  • Desire, Distance, and Movement
  • Toward a Privative Botany
  • Life and Nonbeing
  • 2.3. Toward a Privative Anthropology
  • Consciousness as the Limitation of Life
  • Rilke's Perspective
  • Originary Repression
  • Part 3. Life and Desire
  • 3.1. Desire as the Essence of Being-Alive
  • Introduction
  • The Experience That We Are
  • Experience as Freedom
  • Freedom as the Condition of Experience
  • Desire
  • Life and Desire
  • Desire and Need
  • Metaphysical Desire
  • Desire and Affectivity
  • 3.2. Desire and the Correlation
  • The Lack of the Subject
  • The Search for Oneself in the Other
  • The Lacking Subject and the Subjective Lack
  • The Institution of Proximity
  • The Problem of the Correlation
  • The Meaning of Proximity
  • Touch and Vision
  • The Primordiality of Touch
  • The Experience of the Limit
  • The Interweaving of Vision and Touch
  • 3.3. The Subject and the World
  • Perception and the Incompleteness of Being
  • Desire and Givenness through Profiles
  • World, Space, and Time
  • The Movement of Life
  • The Instability of the Phenomenon
  • The Movement of Desire
  • Conclusion
  • Index
  • About the Author