Breath of proximity : intersubjectivity, ethics and peace /: intersubjectivity, ethics and peace. (2015)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Breath of proximity : intersubjectivity, ethics and peace /: intersubjectivity, ethics and peace. (2015)
- Main Title:
- Breath of proximity : intersubjectivity, ethics and peace
- Further Information:
- Note: Lenart Skof.
- Authors:
- Skof, Lenart
- Contents:
- Acknowledgements; Contents; About the Author; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Towards the Ethical Anatomy of the Body; 1.2 I Breathe, Therefore I Am; References; Part I On Mesocosmic Rituals: Three Accelerations; 2 Towards Mesocosmic Rituals in the Vedas; 2.1 Dimensions of Intercultural Philosophy; 2.2 The Upaniṣads and the Tradition of Indian Studies; 2.3 Progression Towards the Origin of a First Cosmic Gesture: From the Ṛgvedic Saṃhitās to the EarlyProse Upaniṣads; References; 3 Schelling, or from the Abyss of Ethics; 3.1 From the Origin of Ethics: First Breath and Awakening into Intersubjectivity. 3.2 Schelling's Philosophy of the BeginningReferences; 4 A New Way of Gesture (G.H. Mead); 4.1 Mead and the Philosophy of Gesture; 4.2 Mead's Symbolic Interactionism and Philosophy; 4.3 Towards the Genesis of a Pragmatic Theory of Experience; 4.4 Concerning the Dual Nature of Mead's Interactionism, or the Return of His Thought to Philosophy; 4.5 Ethical Gesture: A Gift and Trace of Temporality; References; Part II Two Intermediate Variations on the Elements of Water and Air; 5 Feuerbach's "Pneumatische Wasserheilkunde"; 5.1 Feuerbach's Break with Philosophical Tradition. 5.2 On the Way to Feuerbach's New Epistemology of Sensibility5.3 The Birth of Intersubjectivity from the Spirit of Idealism in the Work of Fichte; 5.4 Towards a New Epoch of Philosophy: Feuerbach's Constitution of Dialectic of Intersubjectivity; References; 6 Heidegger's Hölderlinian Breath; 6.1 On Philosophical Cardiology;Acknowledgements; Contents; About the Author; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Towards the Ethical Anatomy of the Body; 1.2 I Breathe, Therefore I Am; References; Part I On Mesocosmic Rituals: Three Accelerations; 2 Towards Mesocosmic Rituals in the Vedas; 2.1 Dimensions of Intercultural Philosophy; 2.2 The Upaniṣads and the Tradition of Indian Studies; 2.3 Progression Towards the Origin of a First Cosmic Gesture: From the Ṛgvedic Saṃhitās to the EarlyProse Upaniṣads; References; 3 Schelling, or from the Abyss of Ethics; 3.1 From the Origin of Ethics: First Breath and Awakening into Intersubjectivity. 3.2 Schelling's Philosophy of the BeginningReferences; 4 A New Way of Gesture (G.H. Mead); 4.1 Mead and the Philosophy of Gesture; 4.2 Mead's Symbolic Interactionism and Philosophy; 4.3 Towards the Genesis of a Pragmatic Theory of Experience; 4.4 Concerning the Dual Nature of Mead's Interactionism, or the Return of His Thought to Philosophy; 4.5 Ethical Gesture: A Gift and Trace of Temporality; References; Part II Two Intermediate Variations on the Elements of Water and Air; 5 Feuerbach's "Pneumatische Wasserheilkunde"; 5.1 Feuerbach's Break with Philosophical Tradition. 5.2 On the Way to Feuerbach's New Epistemology of Sensibility5.3 The Birth of Intersubjectivity from the Spirit of Idealism in the Work of Fichte; 5.4 Towards a New Epoch of Philosophy: Feuerbach's Constitution of Dialectic of Intersubjectivity; References; 6 Heidegger's Hölderlinian Breath; 6.1 On Philosophical Cardiology; 6.2 Autochthonía: Earth and Fire; 6.3 Transition: Fourfold, Air and the Mesocosm; 6.4 Heidegger, the Winds from India and the Possibility of Breath in the Works of Hölderlin; 6.5 Being, Evil and the Ethical Proximity of Love. 6.6 Postscript: A Note on Heidegger's Black NotebooksReferences; Part III Communities of Breathing, Communities of Peace; 7 Ethics of Breath: Derrida, Lévinas and Irigaray; 7.1 Derrida, Breath and the Non-philosophy of Empiricism; 7.2 "Our Time Is the Breath of the Spirit": Lévinas and the Ethics of Breath; 7.3 Breath and Being: Lévinas Versus Derrida and Irigaray; 7.4 From Lévinas's Ethical Pneumatology to Irigaray; 7.5 Inside and Outside: Breath and the Elements of Nature; References; 8 Divine Violence? Radical Ethics and Politics of Nonviolence. 8.1 The First Recurrence: The Idea of Communism Reclaimed8.2 Interlude: Two Remarks on the Dissipation of Violence; 8.3 The Second or Ethical Recurrence: On the Vicissitudes of Democracy; References; 9 Rorty and Irigaray: On a Culture of Love and Peace; 9.1 The Mirrors of Philosophers; 9.2 A Platform for an Ethics and Politics of Nonviolence and Peace; 9.3 Ethical Spirituality, Love and the Community; 9.4 Some Intercultural Remarks; References; Part IV The Return of the Breath; 10 Breath of Silence; 10.1 On Darksome Courses. Violence; 10.2 Threshold. Silence. … (more)
- Publisher Details:
- Dordrecht [Netherlands] : Springer
- Publication Date:
- 2015
- Copyright Date:
- 2015
- Extent:
- 1 online resource (215 pages)
- Subjects:
- 001.3 155.2 200 302 320 700
Intersubjectivity
Ethics
Peace (Philosophy)
Religion
Political science
Personality
Social psychology
Ethics
Intersubjectivity
Peace (Philosophy)
Personality
Political science
Religion
Social psychology
Electronic books - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9401797382
9789401797382 - Notes:
- Note: Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.
Note: Print version record. - Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
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- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
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- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.419708
- Ingest File:
- 02_527.xml