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  1. 2 giorni fa · Maurice Merleau-Ponty, a leading 20th-century philosopher, challenged established traditions with his innovative views on perception, embodiment, and political philosophy. His tensions with Descartes, Kant, Fodor, and others underscored core disagreements on the body's role in cognition, the intertwining of subject and object, and the primacy of perception.

  2. 1 giorno fa · It has become one of the most important philosophical archives in the world, and many French philosophers have started their careers by exploring it and using the works as jumping-off points – including Jacques Derrida, Paul Ricoeur and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. All because of the bravery of one Belgian priest.

  3. 3 giorni fa · Maurice Merleau-Ponty is another French philosopher, a contemporary and friend of Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. Merleau-Ponty takes Husserl’s account and elaborates upon it as follows: Prior to conscious thought, prior to an exchange with a particular Other, the human world is there for us.

  4. 2 giorni fa · Tobias’s is the slightest of all. Look at how his hand is curled around the angel’s hand and wrist. It is like he’s plucking an apple. The way his middle finger is bent behind his index finger, like a pair of walking legs; the way his little finger is curled, poised, in the same way as on the angel’s right hand.

  5. 5 giorni fa · Following Whitehead, Henri Bergson, as well as the phenomenologists Edmund Husserl and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, the authors seek to restore human experience to its proper place at the very heart of the scientific enterprise.

  6. 4 giorni fa · New in the series this month, Gadamer and the Social Turn in Epistemology, by Carolyn Culbertson, explores Gadamer's hermeneutic theory of understanding and puts this theory into conversation with several social epistemologies, including feminist epistemology. "Culbertson offers not only a detailed and elegant reading of Truth and Method and ...

  7. 3 giorni fa · Secondo questa teoria la coscienza non è un fenomeno puramente mentale, ma è il risultato dell'interazione tra cervello, corpo e ambiente (Maurice Merleau-Ponty, filosofo francese). Questa teoria trova conferme nelle neuroscienze moderne (Joseph LeDoux, Lunga storia di noi stessi.