Results for 'A. Phenomenology of Image Creation'

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  1. Franck dalmas.Imagined Existences & A. Phenomenology of Image Creation - 2009 - In Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka (ed.), Existence, historical fabulation, destiny. Springer Verlag. pp. 93.
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  2.  10
    Lived Images/Imagined Existences: A Phenomenology of Image Creation in the Works of Michel Tournier and Photography.Franck Dalmas - 2009 - In Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka (ed.), Existence, historical fabulation, destiny. Springer Verlag. pp. 91--106.
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  3.  15
    What Drawing and Painting Really Mean: The Phenomenology of Image and Gesture.Paul Crowther - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    There are as many meanings to drawing and painting as there are cultural contexts for them to exist in. But this is not the end of the story. Drawings and paintings are made, and in their making embody unique meanings that transform our perception of space-time and sense of finitude. These meanings have not been addressed by art history or visual studies hitherto, and have only been considered indirectly by philosophers. If these intrinsic meanings are explained and further developed, then (...)
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  4.  55
    A Phenomenology of Image Use in Science.Robert Rosenberger - 2011 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 15 (2):156-169.
    Insights from the phenomenological tradition of philosophy can be fruitfully applied to ongoing scientific investigations. In what follows, I review and refine a methodology I have developed for the application of concepts from the phenomenology of technology—concepts which articulate bodily and perceptual relations to technology—to a specific context of scientific practice: debate over the interpretation of laboratory images. As a guiding example, I introduce a case study of a contemporary debate over images of Mars which reveal evidence of fluid (...)
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  5. Muzyka jako proces i rozwój wewnętrzny w fenomenologicznych koncepcjach muzyki: Berleant, Dufrenne, Ingarden i Merleau-Ponty.Małgorzata A. Szyszkowska - 2017 - Meakultura.
    Music as perception and creation is processual in nature. Its nature is development, succession, dialogical processes of reaching out and harmonizing. Not one process, in fact, but many. Among these processes that make music, author would like to focus on a very specific process of human self development which occurs during listening to music (in any music experience). The entanglement of different ways, in which musical processes appear in the world, author feels, suggest reaching out for Maurice Merleau-Ponty's concept (...)
     
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  6.  26
    Design as enclosure: Draft of a phenomenology of artifice.Ahmet Zeki Turan - 2013 - Technoetic Arts 11 (2):173-183.
    This article drafts a phenomenology of artifice, an interpretation of Human Being and Human Practice, based on the extraordinary claim that design is not the initiator of change, creation and diversity, but it is the essential humanistic quality to compensate the irresistible precession, to regulate the inevitable transformation and divergence of the World. Inspired by the Sufism conception of Human Being, the argument here relies on the theory of a gradual disclosure from the kernel of Universal Man, the (...)
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  7.  28
    The existential and the spiritual in the existential anthropology of G. Marcel and E. Minkowski.A. S. Zinevych - 2018 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 14:142-157.
    Purpose. To examine the existential anthropology of G. Marcel and E. Minkowski, in order to demonstrate the necessity of distinguishing the universal-spiritual, as human in human being, apart from the individual-existential in him, and to reveal the hierarchical correlation of biosocial, existential and spiritual spheres in personality. Theoretical basis. Within existential philosophy the author differentiates two separate traditions and proceeds from the insufficiency of the distinction of existential sphere, proposed by phenomenological tradition, showing the necessity of its correlation with the (...)
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  8.  41
    Looking Through Images: A Phenomenology of Visual Media.Emmanuel Alloa - 2021 - New York: Columbia University Press. Edited by Nils F. Schott & Emmanuel Alloa.
    Images have always stirred ambivalent reactions. Yet whether eliciting fascinated gazes or iconoclastic repulsion from their beholders, they have hardly ever been seen as true sources of knowledge. They were long viewed as mere appearances, placeholders for the things themselves or deceptive illusions. Today, the traditional critique of the spectacle has given way to an unconditional embrace of the visual. However, we still lack a persuasive theoretical account of how images work. -/- Emmanuel Alloa retraces the history of Western attitudes (...)
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  9. A legal phenomenology of images.Costas Douzinas - 2011 - In Oren Ben-Dor (ed.), Law and Art: Justice, Ethics and Aesthetics. New York, NY: Routledge-Cavendish.
     
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  10. Gaston Bachelard and Phenomenology: Outline of a Theory of the Imagination.David Jager, A. Martinez & C. Thiboutot - 1999 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 30 (1):1-17.
    Gaston Bachelard's thought remains a continual source of inspiration for a phenomenological psychology that takes human habitation as a fundamental given and as an abiding mystery of the human condition. the following essay explores the ideas Bachelard developed in the course of his study of poetry. It examines in particular his vision of imagination as a unique passage way by means of which we reach an inhabitable, intersubjective and fully human world. Within that perspective, our lives are constantly renewed by (...)
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  11. Hegel’s Recollection: A Study of Images in the “Phenomenology of Spirit”.Donald Phillip Verene - 1985 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 21 (2):126-128.
     
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  12.  35
    The Flesh of Images, Images of Flesh: Merleau-Ponty Forwarded.Galen A. Johnson - 2017 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 48 (4):360-367.
    The Flesh of Images: Merleau-Ponty Between Painting and Cinema, by Mauro Carbone, is his third book in a body of work interpreting Merleau-Ponty’s ontology of Flesh: The Thinking of the Sensible: M...
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  13.  4
    Looking through Images: A Phenomenology of Visual Media by Emmanuel Alloa.Joachim Rautenberg - forthcoming - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 60 (1):101.
    A book review of Emmanuel Alloa, Looking through Images: A Phenomenology of Visual Media. Translated by Nils F. Schott. New York: Columbia University Press, 2021, xiv + 392 pp. ISBN 9780231187923.
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  14. Hegel’s Recollection: A Study of Images in the “Phenomenology of Spirit”.[author unknown] - 1985 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 50 (2):364-365.
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  15.  3
    The Indiscrete Image: Infinitude and Creation of the Human.Thomas A. Carlson - 2008 - University of Chicago Press.
    Humanity’s creative capacity has never been more unsettling than it is at our current moment, when it has ushered us into new technological worlds that challenge the very definition of “the human.” Those anxious to safeguard the human against techno-scientific threats often appeal to religious traditions to protect the place and dignity of the human. But how well do we understand both theological tradition and today’s technological culture? In _The Indiscrete Image, _Thomas A. Carlson challenges our common ideas about (...)
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  16.  16
    On the Materiality of Images: Philosophy, Painting, and Cinema. Review of Mauro Carbone’s The Flesh of Images.Stephen A. Noble - 2017 - Research in Phenomenology 47 (1):142-151.
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  17.  12
    Looking Through Images: A Phenomenology of Visual Media.Robert R. Clewis - forthcoming - British Journal of Aesthetics:ayac060.
    In his erudite and detailed study, now made available in Nils Schott’s commendable translation a decade after the initial publication of the German version, Emm.
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  18.  8
    A Phenomenology of Christian Life: Glory and Night.Felix Ó Murchadha - 2013 - Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
    How does Christian philosophy address phenomena in the world? Felix Ó Murchadha believes that seeing, hearing, or otherwise sensing the world through faith requires transcendence or thinking through glory and night. By challenging much of Western metaphysics, Ó Murchadha shows how phenomenology opens new ideas about being, and how philosophers of "the theological turn" have addressed questions of creation, incarnation, resurrection, time, love, and faith. He explores the possibility of a phenomenology of Christian life and argues against (...)
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  19.  12
    Cosmogonic or creation myths A mythical, philosophical and theological interpretation of the diverse cosmogonic myths: In conversation with Charles Long.Johan A. Van Rooyen - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (1).
    Cosmogonic myths, also referred to as creation myths, are theological and philosophical explanations of ancient myths of creation within a religious Homo sapien hamlet. In the context of this article, the word myth is attributed to the extravagant quixotic interpretation in anecdote of what is accomplished or ceased as a key or essential phenomenon. The terms or language concepts of cosmogonic or creation invoke the start of things, whether by the desire and action of a surpass Actuality, (...)
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  20.  18
    Choreographic cognition: the time-course and phenomenology of creating a dance.Stephen Malloch, Catherine Stevens, Shirley McKechnie & Nicole Steven - 2003 - Pragmatics and Cognition 11 (2):297-326.
    The process of inception, development and refinement during the creation of a new dance work is described and explored. The account is based on annotated video of the professional choreographer and dancers as they create and sequence new movement material, as well as weekly journal entries made by one of the dancers. A 24-week chronology is reported. We analyse the choreographic process using the Geneplore model of creative cognition as an organising framework and identify generative and exploratory processes including (...)
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  21.  23
    Hegel’s Recollection: A Study of Images in the “Phenomenology of Spirit”.Donald Phillip Verene - 1985 - State University of New York Press.
    Consciousness confronts itself with the aim of achieving absolute knowing. This is the first commentary to regard metaphor, irony, and memory as keys to the understanding of Hegel's basic philosophical position.
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  22.  50
    Hegel's recollection. A study of images in the phenomenology of spirit.Daniel Breazeale - 1987 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 25 (4):608-612.
  23.  11
    Hegel’s Recollection: A Study of Images in the “Phenomenology of Spirit”.Stéphen Bungay - 1985 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 44 (4):415-416.
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  24.  64
    Displacements—Beyond the Coloniality of Images.Alejandro A. Vallega - 2011 - Research in Phenomenology 41 (2):206-227.
    Dynamic mental images are co-constitutive of the determinations of reality and possibility under which our senses of life open and unfold. Ultimately, this dynamic sense of images introduces the difficulty of thinking in light of their role in the configuration of human knowledge and their power over interpretations and determinations of the many senses of beings. This relationship between images and philosophical knowledge is further complicated when one looks at it from the perspective of a colonized consciousness. In such cases (...)
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  25. Why the Imago Dei is in the Intellect Alone: A Criticism of a Phenomenology of Sensible Experience for Attaining an Image of God.Seamus O'Neill - 2018 - The Saint Anselm Journal 13 (2):19-41.
    This paper, as a response to Mark K. Spencer’s, “Perceiving the Image of God in the Whole Human Person” in the present volume, argues in defence of Aquinas’s position that the Imago Dei is limited in the human being to the rational, intellective soul alone. While the author agrees with Spencer that the hierarchical relation between body and soul in the human composite must be maintained while avoiding the various permeations of dualism, nevertheless, the Imago Dei cannot be located (...)
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  26. Hegel’s Recollection: A Study of Images in the “Phenomenology of Spirit”. [REVIEW]Patricia Cook and George R. Lucas Jr - 1988 - The Owl of Minerva 20 (1):81-96.
    Patricia Cook: A great many Hegel commentators have marveled at, and offered their interpretations of, the gallery of fascinating vignettes, metaphors, ironic illusions, and poetic or rhetorical images contained in Hegel’s Phenomenology. Donald Verene proposes to treat this “gallery of pictures” exclusively and in detail. His project is to understand the separation between imaginative thought and the evolution of the Concept - between das Bild and der Begriff - in the Phenomenology.
     
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  27.  20
    The habit of massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs): A phenomenological analysis of bodily self-perception in gaming addiction.Marsia Santa Barbera & Willem Ferdinand Geradus Haselager - 2020 - Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia 11 (2):190-210.
    : We investigate the role played by bodily self-perception and social self-presentation in addiction to massively multiplayer online role-playing games. In this paper we will develop the hypothesis that, at least in some cases, the habit of role-playing can be interpreted as a response to gamers’ need to explore a different bodily self-identity. Players tend to become deeply involved in this kind of game, especially in the character identity creation process. Participants might see and seek reflections of their desired (...)
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    Image, Aspect and Emotion: Towards a Phenomenology of Metaphor.Eduardo Fermandois - 2009 - Ideas Y Valores 58 (140):5-31.
    This article focuses on two largely ignored aspects of the understanding of strong metaphors: the visual dimension and the emotional factors. Particularly, I intend to offer answers to the following questions: 1) What does it mean to understand a visual metaphor? 2) Can Wittgenstein’s ideas about the vision of aspects help to better understand this understanding? 3) In what sense does his notion of secondary sense enrich the philosophical reflection on the understanding of metaphors? 4) In what sense may emotions (...)
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  29.  12
    Mission of the teacher in modern educational space.A. M. Yamaletdinova - 2015 - Liberal Arts in Russia 4 (2):101.
    The uniqueness of the teaching profession is revealed in the article, a teacher professiogram is given and the content of such basic scientific concepts such as educational activities, pedagogical culture, pedagogical competence is specified. The content of the article is related to the change of the educational paradigm, which assumes an orientation on the work of teachers. The mission of the teacher is defined as the creation of the individual, the assertion of man in a man. Drawing on theoretical (...)
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  30.  37
    Hegel's Recollection: A Study of Images in the "Phenomenology of Spirit." By Donald Philip Verene. [REVIEW]Michael G. Vater - 1989 - Modern Schoolman 67 (1):73-75.
  31.  9
    Towards a Phenomenology of Reflective Identification.Simone Villani - 2023 - Sartre Studies International 29 (2):36-58.
    This article deepens themes from Sartre's Being and Nothingness by studying the relevance of the mirror in his play Huis Clos. The mirror can be understood as a means for escaping anguish by identification with the reflected image-object, but also as a figure of the sado-masochistic relationship between two of the play's characters. What is at stake is our possibility of conceiving ourselves as objects independently of the Other. In truth, it is the Other's look that first reveals our (...)
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  32. Time as a Psalm in St. Augustine.A. Johnston - 1996 - Animus 1:68-72.
    This paper argues that in Book XI of the Confessions, a song is not only an image of the divine unity of time on which our own unity of soul is based. Augustine is thinking of creation through the song as divine revelation. Thus through a kind of grace he brings out the unity of time and eternity, of knowledge and image, of thinking with its object, and ultimately of God's creation with the very act of (...)
     
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  33. The indeterminacy of images: An approach to a phenomenology of the imagination.Junichi Murata - 1999 - In Phenomenology: Japanese and American Perspectives. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
  34.  17
    Applied social sciences: philosophy and theology / edited by Georgeta Raţă, Patricia-Luciana Runcan and Michele Marsonet.Georgeta Rață, Patricia-Luciana Runcan & Michele Marscot (eds.) - 2013 - Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    This volume, Applied Social Sciences: Philosophy and Theology, provides the reader with an important set of essays related to the two aforementioned fields of study. Aesthetics plays a key role in contemporary philosophy and several authors examine its various aspects, such as the question of identification of works of art; the concept of â oesocial aestheticsâ ; the social therapeutic function that art can have; and the relationships among hermeneutics, aesthetics and communication sciences. Other papers deal with ethical issues, such (...)
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  35.  32
    The category and phenomenon of the prototype in the context of the phenomenological-dialectical concept of A. F. Losev and the phenomenology of the poetic imagination of G. Bashlyar. [REVIEW]Viacheslav Dubovitskii - 2022 - Философия И Культура 6:47-65.
    The subject of this research is, first of all, the ontological and phenomenological aspects of the prototype as a category and a kind of phenomenon in the field of art and poetic imagination. The research is carried out mainly on the material of the phenomenological-dialectical concept of A. F. Losev and the phenomenology of the poetic imagination of G. Bashlyar. The historical, philosophical and theological contexts of the concept of the prototype of Losev are revealed. The emphasis is made (...)
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  36.  46
    Ego Duplications, Body Doubles, and Dreams: a Contribution To a Phenomenology of Body Image and Memory.Stephan J. Holajter - 1995 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 26 (2):71-102.
    In this paper an "unconscious" structure common to such altered psychological states as dreaming, schizophrenic disintegration, out-of body experiences, and creative acts is described. This description is accomplished by setting psychoanalytic, clinical, and empirical studies zuithin a phenomenological framework. Phenomenological self-reflection is first made a party to discussions which focus on memories and the experience of the lived body. The configurations of "unconsciousness" then take precedence in describing relationships between the "I" of waking consciousness and a transformative body image (...)
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  37.  19
    Descartes on the phenomenon of man and the boundaries of doubt.A. M. Malivskyi - 2020 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 18:144-154.
    Purpose of the article is to reconstruct the ideological and philosophical context in which Descartes actualizes the phenomenon of man and the task of refuting scepticism. A precondition for its implementation is attention to the explication of the peculiarities of reception by researchers of scepticism and the doctrine of doubt; delineation of the semantic implications of the anthropological intention of philosophizing and the boundaries of doubt. Theoretical basis. I base my view of Descartes’ legacy on the conceptual positions of (...), existentialism and hermeneutics. Originality. Based on the tendency of anthropologization of Descartes’ basic project, I refute the widespread tendency to qualify Descartes’ position as a sceptic, which is based on superficial stereotypes about the impersonality of his philosophy. The modern reception of the thinker’s texts indicates the priority for him of the task of explicating the conditions of man’s realization of his own vocation in the Universe, which is supplemented by the idea of the limits of science and the doubt correlative to it. Accordingly, Descartes’ refutation of scepticism appears in the form of concern for the creation of favourable conditions for human self-development, which implies a restrained attitude to the spheres of morality and religion. Conclusions. The author based on his own interpretation of the philosophical searching of the thinker attempted to rehabilitate Descartes’ position on scepticism. An appeal to the texts of the French philosopher shows that doubt is for him a means of creating conditions for the representation of the human in man. A deeper meaningful clarification of the method chosen by Descartes to refute scepticism involves appeal to the will and practical mastery of a new system of semantic coordinates of life. (shrink)
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  38.  28
    The Poetics of Space. [REVIEW]B. D. A. - 1965 - Review of Metaphysics 18 (4):771-772.
    This book is primarily for the patient and empathetic poetaster; it is a treasure-chest of themes on the imagination, metaphor, day-dream, and memory. Bachelard presents a phenomenology of the poetic image of inner or inhabited space, or what he terms "felicitous space." Inner space refers not only to the house of man but to the houses of things, drawers, chests, and wardrobes, and to the houses of animals, nests and shells. Bachelard's method is to articulate the many reverberations (...)
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  39.  8
    Emmanuel Alloa, Looking through Images: A Phenomenology of Visual Media.Anita Merlini - 2022 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 43 (2):424-428.
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  40. Depression and embodiment: phenomenological reflections on motility, affectivity, and transcendence.Kevin A. Aho - 2013 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 16 (4):751-759.
    This paper integrates personal narratives with the methods of phenomenology in order to draw some general conclusions about ‘what it means’ and ‘what it feels like’ to be depressed. The analysis has three parts. First, it explores the ways in which depression disrupts everyday experiences of spatial orientation and motility. This disruption makes it difficult for the person to move and perform basic functional tasks, resulting in a collapse or contraction of the life-world. Second, it illustrates how depression creates (...)
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  41.  10
    The exploratory dimension of fmri experiments.A. Nicolás Venturelli - 2021 - Manuscrito 44 (1):1-36.
    Driven by an appreciation of the field’s early stage of development, I apply the concept of exploratory experimentation, originally put forward in the late 90s philosophy of biology, to current research in cognitive neuroscience. I concentrate on functional magnetic resonance imaging and how this wide-spread technique is used, from experimental design to data analysis. I claim that, although subject to certain significant modifications with respect to the concept’s original rendering, the exploratory character of neuroimaging experiments can be appreciated considering their (...)
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  42.  4
    A phenomenological study on the Image in the Society of The Fourth Industrial Revolution - On the Base of Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology -. 김병환 - 2018 - Journal of the Daedong Philosophical Association 84:43-70.
    This thesis aims to clarify the intrinsic characteristics of ‘image’ of everything for the image in the society of the fourth industrial revolution by the phenomenological dimention based on Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology, and to clarify the value of image, the intrinsic characteristics of ‘painting-image’, ‘photo-image’ and ‘film-image’. It will reveal that ‘thing-image’, ‘artifact-image’, ‘digital image’, ‘robot-image’ become the images for society of humanities by these clarifications. The image of everything (...)
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  43.  10
    The writing of Cosmist philosophers Alexander N. Gorsky, Nikolai A. Setnitsky and Valeryan N. Muravyov as a synthesis of literature and philosophy. [REVIEW]A. G. Gacheva - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 72 (3-4):333-349.
    This article discusses the body of work produced in the 1920–1930s by the Cosmist philosophers Alexander Gorsky, Nikolai Setnitsky, and Valeryan Muravyov as a representative case of the interaction between philosophy and literature typical for the Russian culture in the nineteenth to twentieth centuries. The article demonstrates how the synthesizing nature of the Cosmists’ creative thought, along with the multiplicity of their cultural roles, led to their use of genre forms which combined two types of writing, the literary and the (...)
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  44.  29
    Book Review: The Language of the Cave. [REVIEW]A. Serge Kappler - 1996 - Philosophy and Literature 20 (1):266-268.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Language of the CaveA. Serge KapplerThe Language of the Cave, by Andrew Barker and Martin Warner; vi & 198 pp. Edmonton: Academic Printing & Publishing, 1993, $54.95 cloth, $21.95 paper.The scholarly essays in this collection focus on the tension between Plato’s expressed views about style, poetry, and intellectual discourse on the one hand and his own practice on the other. Why does a man fiercely hostile toward (...)
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  45.  9
    From Eco’s Aperturato Fractal Narrative: Recursion as a Tool of Order in Contemporary Narratives.German A. Duarte - 2017 - Human and Social Studies. Research and Practice 6 (1):13-33.
    In 1962 Umberto Eco published his Opera aperta. Forma e indeterminazione nelle poetiche contemporanee, in which he dealt with the televised space and its influence on the development of plot in contemporary narratives. The analysis of the aesthetic of television led him to highlight the exclusive capacity of television to transmit events in real time: Live TV.Eco affirms in particular that through the editing in Live TV, the role of choice completely changes in comparison to what happens in the editing (...)
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  46. D.P. Verene, "Hegel's recollection: A study of images in the phenomenology of spirit".H. S. Harris - 1987 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 21 (2):126.
     
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  47.  58
    An Interpretation of Sartre’s Phenomenology of the Image as a Phenomenology of the Sign.Ahmet Süner - 2020 - Journal of Philosophical Research 45:231-247.
    Sartre’s phenomenology of the image in L’Imaginaire includes analytical distinctions between the mind’s comportments towards perceptual objects, images, and signs, which he refers to as different forms of consciousness. Sartre denies any possible convergence between imaging and sign consciousness, arguing that there are essential differences in the way they relate to the notions of resemblance, positionality, and affect. This essay argues against his phenomenological distinctions by stressing the continuity of imaging with sign consciousness: between images and words. In (...)
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  48.  35
    Musical Phenomenology: Artistic Traditions and Everyday Experience.Małgorzata A. Szyszkowska - 2018 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 9 (2):141-155.
    The work begins by asking the questions of how contemporary phenomenology is concerned with music, and how phenomenological descriptions of music and musical experiences are helpful in grasping the concreteness of these experiences. I then proceed with minor findings from phenomenological authorities, who seem to somehow need music to explain their phenomenology. From Maurice Merleau-Ponty to Jean-Luc Nancy and back to Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, there are musical findings to be asserted. I propose to look at phenomenological (...)
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  49.  16
    Music in phantastes and lilith by George MacDonald: The phenomenon of intermediality.A. I. Samsonova - 2014 - Liberal Arts in Russia 3 (1):16.
    Musical elements in the structure of G. MacDonald’s Phantastes and Lilith in the context of the theory of intermediality are studied. The following musical elements are analyzed: motif of fairy world’s music, images of music of nature, musical description of characters’ voices, insertions of songs, interpretation of music as an art. These musical elements act as a characterization of topoi, landscape, characters, technique of stylistic imitation and means of rhythmic organization of narration, expression of author’s point of view. The paper (...)
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  50. Change blindness: Implications for the nature of visual attention.Ronald A. Rensink - 2001 - In L. Harris & M. Jenkin (eds.), Vision and Attention. New York: Academic Press. pp. 16-20.
    In the not-too-distant past, vision was often said to involve three levels of processing: a low level concerned with descriptions of the geometric and photometric properties of the image, a high level concerned with abstract knowledge of the physical and semantic properties of the world, and a middle level concerned with anything not handled by the other two. The negative definition of mid-level vision contained in this description reflected a rather large gap in our understanding of visual processing: How (...)
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