Details
Title | A companion to Ricoeur's Freedom and nature. |
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Creators | Davidson Scott |
Collection | Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция |
Subjects | Free will and determinism. ; PHILOSOPHY / Free Will & Determinism. ; EBSCO eBooks |
Document type | Other |
File type | |
Language | English |
Rights | Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование) |
Record key | on1039094763 |
Record create date | 6/8/2018 |
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- Cover
- A Companion to Ricoeur’s Freedom and Nature
- A Companion to Ricoeur’s Freedom and Nature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Introduction: Freedom and Nature, Then and Now
- Notes on the Composition of Freedom and Nature
- Historical Influences
- Key Themes
- New Trajectories
- The Exergue as a Poetics of the Will
- Notes
- References
- Historical Influences
- Chapter 1
- Ricoeur and Merleau-Ponty
- A Common Path and a Common Goal
- From Perception to Action
- The Intentionality of Acting
- Freedom and Finitude
- References
- Chapter 2
- Act, Sign and Objectivity
- Freedom and the Fault: Nabert’s Influence on the Ricoeurian Philosophy of the Will
- Questions of Method
- The Reciprocity of the Voluntary and the Involuntary in Light of the Nabertian Conception of the Act and Sign
- The Semeiological Method of Freedom and Nature: The Diagnostic Correlation between the Body-object and the “Apprenticeship to Signs”
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 3
- Ravaisson and Ricoeur on Habit
- Ravaisson on Habit
- Ricoeur’s Phenomenology of Habit
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 4
- The Influence of Aquinas’s Psychology and Cosmology on Ricoeur’s Freedom and Nature
- Thomism in Mid-twentieth-Century France
- Thomas Aquinas in Freedom and Nature
- The Critical Appraisal of Aquinas’s Cosmology
- The Constructive Retrieval of Aquinas’s Psychology
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Key Themes
- Chapter 5
- The Paradox of Attention
- Attention in Freedom and Nature
- Historical Background to the Cartesian Attention Tradition (CAT)
- Ricoeur’s Synthesis of CAT with Husserlian Phenomenology
- Judgment, the Event of Choice, and the Effort of Attention
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 6
- The Status of the Subject in Ricoeur’s Phenomenology of Decision
- The Project-to-be-done and the Forgetting of the Ego-subject
- The Ego-subject’s Involvement in Decision and the Issue of Responsibility
- Reflexive and Pre-reflexive Imputation of the Ego-subject in the Decision
- References
- Chapter 7
- Volo, ergo sum
- Conscious Will and Embodied Existence: Disjunction and Reconciliation
- Ricoeur Reading Maine de Biran: Attention, Effort, Resistance
- Derrida on Maine de Biran: Resistance First, Then Effort
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 8
- On Habit
- Habit and Method
- Habit and Mechanism
- From Habit to Nature as a Ground
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 9
- The Phenomenon of Life and Its Pathos
- Three Figures of the Involuntary
- The Eidetic Description of Life
- The Pathos of the Involuntary
- Conclusion: An Eidetics of Consent and its Limitations
- Notes
- References
- New Trajectories
- Chapter 10
- A Descriptive Science of First-Person Experience
- The Question of Historical Fact
- The Epistemological-Methodological Question
- A Prospective and Heuristic Question
- The Necessity of a First-Person Method
- Microphenomenological Explication and the Access to Meaning by Writing
- The Status of the Text in a “First-Person Phenomenology”
- From the Microphenomenological Explicitation Interview to Self-Explicitation
- Conclusion
- Note
- References
- Chapter 11
- Ricoeur’s Take on Embodied Cognition and Imagination
- The Embodied Mind: A “Mixture” between the Mental and the Body
- Imagination at the Heart of Embodied Cognition
- Conclusion: Bringing Phenomenology Back to Enactivism
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 12
- Freedom and Resentment and Ricoeur
- Introduction: Metaphysical Freedom and Responsibility
- Cause, Character and Experienced Necessity
- Optimists versus Pessimists
- From Norms to Narration
- Our Fabulous Freedom
- Notes
- References
- Cause, Character and Experienced Necessity
- Index
- About the Contributors