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|a UAMI
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|a Moran, Richard.
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|a Authority and Estrangement :
|b an Essay on Self-knowledge.
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|a New Jersey :
|b Princeton University Press,
|c 2011.
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|a 1 online resource (243 pages)
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|a text
|b txt
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|a Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; Outline of the Chapters; Preface; Acknowledgments; Chapter One: The Image of Self- Knowledge; 1.1 The Fortunes of Self-Consciousness: Descartes, Freud, and Cognitive Science; 1.2 The Possibility of Self-Knowledge: Introspection, Perception, and Deflation; 1.3 Constitutive Relations and Detection; 1.4 "Conscious Belief": Locating the First-Person; Chapter Two: Making Up Your Mind: Self-Interpretation and Self-Constitution; 2.1 Self-Interpretation, Objectivity, and Independence; 2.2 Self-Fulfillment and Its Discontents; 2.3 The Whole Person's Discrete States.
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|a 2.4 Belief and the Activity of Interpreting2.5 The Process of Self-Creation: Theoretical and Deliberative Questions; 2.6 Relations of Transparency; Chapter Three: Self-Knowledge as Discovery and as Resolution; 3.1 Wittgenstein and Moore's Paradox; 3.2 Sartre, Self-Consciousness, and the Limits of the Empirical; 3.3 Avowal and Attribution; 3.4 Binding and Unbinding; Chapter Four: The Authority of Self- Consciousness; 4.1 Expressing, Reporting, and Avowing; 4.2 Rationality, Awareness, and Control: A Look Inside; 4.3 From Supervision to Authority: Agency and the Attitudes.
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|a 4.4 The Retreat to Evidence4.5 First-Person Immediacy and Authority; 4.6 Introspection and the Deliberative Point of View; 4.7 Reflection and the Demands of Authority: Apprehension, Arrest, and Conviction; 4.8 The Reflective Agent; Chapter Five: Impersonality, Expression, and the Undoing of Self-Knowledge; 5.1 Self-Other Asymmetries and Their Skeptical Interpretation; 5.2 The Partiality of the Impersonal Stance; 5.3 Self-Effacement and Third-Person Privilege; 5.4 Paradoxes of Self-Censure; 5.5 Incorporation and the Expressive Reading; 5.6 "Not First-Personal Enough?"; Bibliography; Index; A.
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|a Since Socrates, and through Descartes to the present day, the problems of self-knowledge have been central to philosophy's understanding of itself. Today the idea of ''first-person authority''--the claim of a distinctive relation each person has toward his or her own mental life--has been challenged from a number of directions, to the point where many doubt the person bears any distinctive relation to his or her own mental life, let alone a privileged one. In Authority and Estrangement, Richard Moran argues for a reconception of the first-person and its claims. Indeed, he writes, a more thorou.
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|a JSTOR
|b Books at JSTOR All Purchased
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|a JSTOR
|b Books at JSTOR Demand Driven Acquisitions (DDA)
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|a JSTOR
|b Books at JSTOR Evidence Based Acquisitions
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|a Self-knowledge, Theory of.
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|a Connaissance de soi.
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|a PHILOSOPHY
|x Mind & Body.
|2 bisacsh
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|a PSYCHOLOGY
|x Personality.
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|a PHILOSOPHY
|x Epistemology.
|2 bisacsh
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|a Self-knowledge, Theory of.
|2 fast
|0 (OCoLC)fst01111780
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|i Print version:
|a Moran, Richard.
|t Authority and Estrangement : An Essay on Self-knowledge.
|d New Jersey : Princeton University Press, ©2011
|z 9780691089454
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|u https://jstor.uam.elogim.com/stable/10.2307/j.ctt7sgs5
|z Texto completo
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|a EBL - Ebook Library
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|a EBSCOhost
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|a ProQuest MyiLibrary Digital eBook Collection
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|n 338000
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