Table of Contents:
  • Introduction. The problematic place of imagination
  • Part one. Preliminary portrait
  • 1. Examples and first approximations
  • 2. Imagining as intentional
  • Part two. Detailed descriptions
  • 3. Spontaneity and controlledness
  • 4. Self-containedness and self-evidence
  • 5. Indeterminacy and pure possibility
  • Part three. Phenomenological comparisons
  • 6. Imagining and perceiving: continuities
  • 7. Imagining and perceiving: discontinuities
  • Part four. The autonomy of imagining
  • 8. The nature of imaginative autonomy
  • 9. The significance of imaginative autonomy.