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Idealism and Corporeity
Tallenna

Idealism and Corporeity

Kirjailija:
sidottu, 1997
englanti
What is meant by "body" in Husserl's phenomenology? "Body" is a thing that is "alive" or "animated" (beseelt). In Husserl, this concept covers a wide range of phenomena. It is the condition for the possibility of the event of the arrival of someone and my being in the position to meaningfully announce this presence. It is as "ensouled" that the "I" speaks and is spoken to. To be "without soul" means to be separated from the world and from other, incarnate beings. But why rely on the concept of "soul" to understand such phenomena? Is this not a reprise of a metaphysics of the soul, one that posits the "mental" as a unique substance, an invisible mover of things? This essay argues that the problem of the body is of central importance for Husserl's transcendental idealism. It is the key to the sense of human being as, despite its "worldliness", something transcendent with respect to the world, thus something "spiritual".
Alaotsikko
An Essay on the Problem of the Body in Husserl’s Phenomenology
Kirjailija
J. Dodd
Painos
1997 ed.
ISBN
9780792344001
Kieli
englanti
Paino
446 grammaa
Julkaisupäivä
28.2.1997
Kustantaja
Springer
Sivumäärä
160