Consciousness, Self and World: Husserl and the Phenomenological
... term for the conscious ‘what-it-is-likeness’ of experience (or its phenomenal contents), without much attention to, or interest in, the structural articulations of this what-it-is-likeness. But it is precisely the analysis of these structures which has been the central concern of phenomenology, unde ...
... term for the conscious ‘what-it-is-likeness’ of experience (or its phenomenal contents), without much attention to, or interest in, the structural articulations of this what-it-is-likeness. But it is precisely the analysis of these structures which has been the central concern of phenomenology, unde ...
Dennett and Phenomenology - Center for Subjectivity Research
... 1993a, 51). It is consequently no coincidence that Dennett characterizes heterophenomenology as a black box psychology (Dennett 1982, 177). Strictly speaking, heterophenomenology doesn’t study conscious phenomena, since it is neutral about whether they exist; rather it studies reports of conscious p ...
... 1993a, 51). It is consequently no coincidence that Dennett characterizes heterophenomenology as a black box psychology (Dennett 1982, 177). Strictly speaking, heterophenomenology doesn’t study conscious phenomena, since it is neutral about whether they exist; rather it studies reports of conscious p ...
PDF - Berkeley Buddhist studies
... the West. The “laboratory” for Buddhist inner science is the practice of meditation, and the neuroscience and therapeutic effects of Buddhist meditation are now regarded as legitimate fields of research. The recent interest in Yogācāra and phenomenology might then be seen as part of a larger proje ...
... the West. The “laboratory” for Buddhist inner science is the practice of meditation, and the neuroscience and therapeutic effects of Buddhist meditation are now regarded as legitimate fields of research. The recent interest in Yogācāra and phenomenology might then be seen as part of a larger proje ...
- Philsci
... phenomenology to be discovered if I knew better how to look. Or do you think that every time we’re wrong about our emotions, those emotions must be wholly nonconscious, dispositional, not genuinely felt? Or felt and perfectly apprehended phenomenologically but somehow nonetheless mislabeled? Can’t I ...
... phenomenology to be discovered if I knew better how to look. Or do you think that every time we’re wrong about our emotions, those emotions must be wholly nonconscious, dispositional, not genuinely felt? Or felt and perfectly apprehended phenomenologically but somehow nonetheless mislabeled? Can’t I ...
The Reification of Mindfulness: Ontological Drift in Buddhist Thought
... including consciousness, as a collection of processes in a constant state of flux. Far from being irrelevant, these distinctions shape the goal, methodology, and lens of each tradition. Where Hinduism aims to understand the stable, all-encompassing unity that underlies reality, Buddhism aims to see ...
... including consciousness, as a collection of processes in a constant state of flux. Far from being irrelevant, these distinctions shape the goal, methodology, and lens of each tradition. Where Hinduism aims to understand the stable, all-encompassing unity that underlies reality, Buddhism aims to see ...
“An Event in Sound”1 Considerations on the Ethical
... To the Greeks, to know something was to uncover its being. They called this uncovering aletheia, which can be translated as truth, or literally as unconcealedness (Heidegger, 1998, p. 11). In the fine arts, beauty is exactly this unconcealedness and disclosure. Its appearance is related to the idea ...
... To the Greeks, to know something was to uncover its being. They called this uncovering aletheia, which can be translated as truth, or literally as unconcealedness (Heidegger, 1998, p. 11). In the fine arts, beauty is exactly this unconcealedness and disclosure. Its appearance is related to the idea ...
Consciousness: The Hard Problem
... 2) Objections to A- without P-Consciousness Blindsight: is it really true that the patient has no P-consciousness of stimuli (e.g. ‘X’ or ‘O’), or do they have a little P-consciousness (a vague feeling that it is an ‘X’, for example), which corresponds to the little A-consciousness that they exhibi ...
... 2) Objections to A- without P-Consciousness Blindsight: is it really true that the patient has no P-consciousness of stimuli (e.g. ‘X’ or ‘O’), or do they have a little P-consciousness (a vague feeling that it is an ‘X’, for example), which corresponds to the little A-consciousness that they exhibi ...
Karin Dahlberg
... phenomenal field and lifeworld add something vital to this scientific arena, which for so many years has been dominated by medicine. The apt for mathematics and statistical measurements has urged medicine to divide and categorise the living human existence into separate entities such as body and sou ...
... phenomenal field and lifeworld add something vital to this scientific arena, which for so many years has been dominated by medicine. The apt for mathematics and statistical measurements has urged medicine to divide and categorise the living human existence into separate entities such as body and sou ...
5 derrida`s critique of husserl and the philosophy of presence
... Derrida follows Heidegger’s distinction between (a) the sense of Being, (b) the word Being, and (c) the concept of Being. For Heidegger’s discussion of this, see Martin Heidegger, Sein und Zeit, 12th ed. (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 1972), English translation, John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson, Being ...
... Derrida follows Heidegger’s distinction between (a) the sense of Being, (b) the word Being, and (c) the concept of Being. For Heidegger’s discussion of this, see Martin Heidegger, Sein und Zeit, 12th ed. (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 1972), English translation, John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson, Being ...
Don Ihde vs Bruno Latour
... the foundation of a new ideology for technological action. In those historical pages, Turing asked, “can a machine think?” His answer was affirmative, arriving to it through a series of pragmatic substitutions to the initial question. We can see that Turing identified mechanical “communication” with ...
... the foundation of a new ideology for technological action. In those historical pages, Turing asked, “can a machine think?” His answer was affirmative, arriving to it through a series of pragmatic substitutions to the initial question. We can see that Turing identified mechanical “communication” with ...
Handout
... Heidegger also admits that it was a mistake for him (in Being and Time and elsewhere) to have used the word “truth” for un-concealment. He writes that using the word “truth” for anything but correctness was “inappropriate and consequently misleading.” The only kinds of un-concealment that can be cor ...
... Heidegger also admits that it was a mistake for him (in Being and Time and elsewhere) to have used the word “truth” for un-concealment. He writes that using the word “truth” for anything but correctness was “inappropriate and consequently misleading.” The only kinds of un-concealment that can be cor ...
Conscious Experience
... merely the Tatest intellectual fashion. Secondly, the success of such an undertaking is by no means assured. One has to ask: does the concept `consciousness' really define an independent and coherent domain, a subject area that could correspond to an autonomous area of research ? 3 What would be the ...
... merely the Tatest intellectual fashion. Secondly, the success of such an undertaking is by no means assured. One has to ask: does the concept `consciousness' really define an independent and coherent domain, a subject area that could correspond to an autonomous area of research ? 3 What would be the ...
full text pdf
... becomes not only the consciousness of something but also the consciousness for someone qua the ego. Eventually, Husserl inquires into collective consciousness by expanding the solipsist account of intentionality. Exemplars of such inquiries are Husserl’s analysis of socio-historical groups such as c ...
... becomes not only the consciousness of something but also the consciousness for someone qua the ego. Eventually, Husserl inquires into collective consciousness by expanding the solipsist account of intentionality. Exemplars of such inquiries are Husserl’s analysis of socio-historical groups such as c ...
Feel or perspective? - Animal Studies Repository
... establishing the distinctness of feel and perspective, however, is that each feature seems to require a different type of explanation. For example, Lycan (1996) has argued that perspective can be best explained in terms of a higher-order experiential model of consciousness, grounded in the idea of o ...
... establishing the distinctness of feel and perspective, however, is that each feature seems to require a different type of explanation. For example, Lycan (1996) has argued that perspective can be best explained in terms of a higher-order experiential model of consciousness, grounded in the idea of o ...
Landscape and Dwelling Lars Botin PhD, MA Ass. Professor
... is still referred to in any class on theory, philosophy and history of architecture. Dwellings are as well how we are in the world and how we relate to reality. Dwellings are cultural and social entities that speak and represent this being-inthe-world and as such dwellings are integrated and insepar ...
... is still referred to in any class on theory, philosophy and history of architecture. Dwellings are as well how we are in the world and how we relate to reality. Dwellings are cultural and social entities that speak and represent this being-inthe-world and as such dwellings are integrated and insepar ...
ON PHENOMENOLOGICAL SOCIOLOGY
... sociology." Radical problems are discovered in their use of key concepts in phenomenology: intention, reduction, phenomenon and essence. These problems are shown to arise out of a failure to grasp the nature of the phenomenological enterprise and its relationship to sociology. Turning back to the or ...
... sociology." Radical problems are discovered in their use of key concepts in phenomenology: intention, reduction, phenomenon and essence. These problems are shown to arise out of a failure to grasp the nature of the phenomenological enterprise and its relationship to sociology. Turning back to the or ...
Microsoft Word - AC, Introduction, Cogprints
... based on a set of relatively simple considerations. This is not to say, however, that I want to belittle transcendental reduction; on the contrary, unlike most contemporary philosophers, including many phenomenologists, I consider it one of the most important achievements of 20th century philosophic ...
... based on a set of relatively simple considerations. This is not to say, however, that I want to belittle transcendental reduction; on the contrary, unlike most contemporary philosophers, including many phenomenologists, I consider it one of the most important achievements of 20th century philosophic ...
`Among contemporaries the most exciting thinker, masterful
... consciousness of the world we live in as agents. It is an awareness of what we are about. So, for instance, our primary awareness of objects is as things “to hand,” ready to use. Living in this awareness is what Heidegger calls caring. In this kind of living the “scientific” split between mind and b ...
... consciousness of the world we live in as agents. It is an awareness of what we are about. So, for instance, our primary awareness of objects is as things “to hand,” ready to use. Living in this awareness is what Heidegger calls caring. In this kind of living the “scientific” split between mind and b ...
Materializing the Immaterial: The Ontological Orientations and
... The paper will introduce the subject through a review of other artists, philosophers and architects who chose the domestic as a means to materialize their philosophy and theories, including: Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Norway cabin and the house he designed for his sister, Pablo Neruda’s houses, and Carl ...
... The paper will introduce the subject through a review of other artists, philosophers and architects who chose the domestic as a means to materialize their philosophy and theories, including: Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Norway cabin and the house he designed for his sister, Pablo Neruda’s houses, and Carl ...
Do We Think Outside The Stream Of Consciousness?
... stream of thought, on which both Soteriou and Tye and Wright rely. James’ main reasons for the continuity of consciousness is their belonging to a self and the presence of transitions linking “substantive” parts (percepts, concepts, etc.). I set aside the first question and regard the second issue ...
... stream of thought, on which both Soteriou and Tye and Wright rely. James’ main reasons for the continuity of consciousness is their belonging to a self and the presence of transitions linking “substantive” parts (percepts, concepts, etc.). I set aside the first question and regard the second issue ...
Martin Heidegger, Off the Beaten Track
... Continental philosophy. The most notable strength of this work is that it would help Anglophone readers form textually enriched views on Heidegger’s 1933 ...
... Continental philosophy. The most notable strength of this work is that it would help Anglophone readers form textually enriched views on Heidegger’s 1933 ...
Subjectivity, Objectivity, Intersubjectivity: Phenomenology and
... Husserl says that the primordial sphere is characterised by original givenness, the “alien” sphere by non-original, re-presented givenness: the difference is not temporal, logical, or foundational but lies in the mode of givenness. However, this conception is highly problematic. As I have pointed pu ...
... Husserl says that the primordial sphere is characterised by original givenness, the “alien” sphere by non-original, re-presented givenness: the difference is not temporal, logical, or foundational but lies in the mode of givenness. However, this conception is highly problematic. As I have pointed pu ...
CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS
... 1. Everyday life and its language are the point of departures for his philosophy. 2. The texts are rather hermetic. 3. The use of a lot of neologisms. 4. To make great play of the original meanings of words. A discontinuity in style > the later work is more evocative (influenced by poetry). ...
... 1. Everyday life and its language are the point of departures for his philosophy. 2. The texts are rather hermetic. 3. The use of a lot of neologisms. 4. To make great play of the original meanings of words. A discontinuity in style > the later work is more evocative (influenced by poetry). ...
2 / Communication before deconstruction
... meaning [that is, the conditions of intelligibility] of things in general” (Anil Mitra: Heidegger on Being) 1. The question of the topos of being: where is this internal possibility of understanding of Being to be found? 2. The question of interpreting that understanding once that topos is located. ...
... meaning [that is, the conditions of intelligibility] of things in general” (Anil Mitra: Heidegger on Being) 1. The question of the topos of being: where is this internal possibility of understanding of Being to be found? 2. The question of interpreting that understanding once that topos is located. ...
MTO 0.11: Covach, Destructuring Cartesian Dualism
... [2] Ingarden thinks of the musical work as an “intentional object,” by which he means that it is an object for me and towards which my consciousness is directed. Phenomenologists tend to hold that the notion of intentionality, first proposed by Franz Brentano but most often associated with the work ...
... [2] Ingarden thinks of the musical work as an “intentional object,” by which he means that it is an object for me and towards which my consciousness is directed. Phenomenologists tend to hold that the notion of intentionality, first proposed by Franz Brentano but most often associated with the work ...