Abstract

Foreword, Taylor Carman Introduction, Claude Lefort Preface Introduction: Classical Prejudices and the Return to Phenomena I. Sensation II. Association and the Projection of Memories III. Attention and Judgment IV. The Phenomenal Field Part 1: The Body 1. The Body as an Object and Mechanistic Physiology 2. The Experience of the Body and Classical Psychology 3. The Spatiality of the One's Own Body and Motility 4. The Synthesis of One's Own Body 5. The Body as a Sexed Being 6. Speech and the Body as Expression Part 2: The Perceived World 7. Sensing 8. Space 9. The Thing and the Natural World 10. Others and the Human World Part 3: Being-For-Itself and Being-In-The-World 11. The Cogito 12. Temporality 13. Freedom Original Bibliography Bibliography of English Translations cited Additional Work Cited Index

Keywords

Phenomenology (philosophy)PerceptionPsychologyEpistemologyPhilosophyPsychoanalysisCognitive psychologyCognitive science

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Year
1982
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book
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9850
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Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1982). Phenomenology of Perception. . https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203981139

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DOI
10.4324/9780203981139