Sartre's Phenomenology
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:24th May '07
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An im portant new book that addresses central themes in Being and Nothingness, and compares some of Sartre's views to those of his leading contemporary from the analytic school, P.F. Strawson.
In "Being and Nothingness", Sartre picks up diverging threads in the phenomenological tradition, weaves them together with ideas from Gestalt and behaviourist psychology. This work describes Sartre's account of the transition from one's original apprehension of another consciousness to the perception of other persons.In Being and Nothingness Sartre picks up diverging threads in the phenomenological tradition, weaves them together with ideas from Gestalt and behaviourist psychology, and asks: What is consciousness? What is its relationship to the body, to the external world, and to other minds? Sartre believes that the mind and its states are by-products of introspection, created in the act that purports to discover them. How does this happen? And how are we able to perceive ourselves as persons - physical objects with mental states? Sartre's Phenomenology reconstructs Sartre's answers to these crucial questions. On Sartre's view, consciousness originally apprehends itself in terms of what it is consciousness of, that is, as an activity of apprehending the world. David Reisman traces the path from this minimal form of self-consciousness to the perception of oneself as a full-blown person. Similar considerations apply to the perception of others. Reisman describes Sartre's account of the transition from one's original apprehension of another consciousness to the perception of other persons. An understanding of the various levels of self-apprehension and of the apprehension of others allows Reisman to penetrate the key ideas in Being and Nothingness, and to compare Sartre to analytic philosophers on fundamental questions in the philosophy of mind.
"enormously though-provoking...I am certain that this book will, and should, provoke a good deal of discussion among scholars of the early Sartre" Reviewed by Katherine Morris in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, April 2008
ISBN: 9780826487254
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 370g
160 pages