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  1. 5 giorni fa · This work contributes to the phenomenological understanding of pain and temporality by drawing on Merleau-Ponty’s concept of the lived body and lived time and applying it to the study of temporality and pain. Merleau-Ponty himself did not develop a detailed theory on this topic.

  2. 3 giorni fa · The first two sections survey work on silence in depression in mental health research and phenomenological psychopathology. Through engaging with Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s work on silence and its relationship to speech, the third section outlines a phenomenological framework for explicating the structure of silence experiences in psychopathology.

  3. 2 giorni fa · In sostanza siamo di fronte a una perimetrazione - compiuta con l’ausilio dell’interpretazione, principalmente, di tre autori «classici» (Machiavelli, Spinoza e Hegel) - di un «campo» (per usare un’espressione che, a questo proposito, ha utilizzato Maurice Merleau-Ponty) nel quale spazio e tempo si innervano e si intersecano alla ricerca del «dare vita a qualcosa»; del realizzare ...

  4. 3 giorni fa · Maurice Merleau Ponty’s point is richly instructive, enabling us to understand that the world can be known through art and the artists who give sense to it. Alexandros Georgiou By extension, this implies that the artist acts as a link between two worlds that would otherwise be unable to communicate.

  5. 5 giorni fa · Chronic pain is a common disorder with enormous sociomedical importance. A major part of primary and secondary costs of illness is caused by the various pain syndromes. Nociception – the sensory perception of a painful stimulus – is a complex …

  6. 2 giorni fa · He drew on philosophical insights, particularly from Martin Heidegger and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, to argue that human intelligence is fundamentally different from machine processing. Overestimation of AI Potential: Dreyfus was critical of the optimistic predictions made by early AI researchers.

  7. 2 giorni fa · We’ve just all agreed that those marks make up a word that stands in for it. Sign, Signifier, Signified. We’re up against all that. French philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty calls expressive gestures, like pointing, our “first language,” and that’s basically what we’re trying to do when we write—point at something.