... Buckley,5–22. New York: NewYorkUniversity Press, 1988.———. “An Essay on Psychoanalytic Theory:Two Theories of Schizophrenia.Part II Discussion and Re-statement of the Specific Theory of Schizo-phrenia.” ... Albany, NY: State UniversityofNewYork Press, 1996.London, N. “An Essay on Psychoanalytic Theory:Two Theories of Schizophre-nia. Part I Review and Critical Assessment of the Development of theTwo ... Buckley,177–232. New York: NewYorkUniversity Press, 1988.Soler, Colette. “The Body in the Teaching of Jacques Lacan.” JCFAR 6 (1995):6–38.Verhaeghe, Paul. “The Collapse of the Function of the Father...
... ordered stream of experiences that ultimately ends in death. Life, rather, is a “movement” or “happening” that is struc-turally determined by the ever-present possibility of death. Death, as a ... laid the foundations for a critique of Heidegger through his systematic analysis of the primacy of bodily perception, particularly in terms of our spatial directionality and orientation, a sensual ... terms of objective matter, of static corporeal substance (res extensa).In Being and Time, Heidegger makes it clear that one cannot think of Dasein in this way, “as a being-present -at- hand of some...
... schema of a category of relation we will bedealing with a determinate temporal relation that is the sensible analog of thedeterminate relation of thought that is found in the appropriate pure concept.Thus, ... impressions of the copy thesis.47. Treatise, Bk. I, pt. I, Đ VII, 18. Kant on CausationOn the Fivefold Routes to thePrinciple of CausationSteven M. Bayne State UniversityofNewYork Press ... try to formulate (from Kant’s hints) an explanation of the significance of the term analogy of experience.The first hint at an explanation of the significance of the term analogy of experience...
... issue that has been continuallysubjected to discussion in various circles, including that of religion,under the guise of the consideration of the relationship between themodernization of Japan ... secularizedand mechanized world, for it is both a dehumanizing force and acutting off of the metaphysical roots that chart a path out of nihilisticdespair. What we need is a pathway that leads us toward ... perspec-tive of interconnectedness with each other, the worldof nature, andour ultimate source. It is his hope that the East may be able to contrib-ute a new way of thinking, arising out of its...
... delivered at a colloquium in memory of MartinHeidegger that was held at Pennsylvania StateUniversity in April1977; in a paper “Immateriality and the Play of Imagination,” read at the meeting of the ... translation through the pervasive rationalization of allsectors of human life. What has become questionable in the highestdegree is not the rationalization of man but rather the very rationalitythat ... a matter, not of preparing an alienation of that text, but rather of freeing a level of discourse submerged in that text and of establishing its unity by refer-ence to a certain subordinate...
... considered one of the creators of a sober scientific prose style. He is also theoriginator of a multitude of technical terms that, by way of their Latin translation,have become a fixed part of philosophical ... impiety (asebeia), the same accusation that had brought aboutSocrates’ death. Hinting at the fate of that “best, wisest and most just man amongthose alive at the time”(Plato, Phaidon 118a), he is ... basis of the later dictum amicusPlato, magis amica veritas, which means, loosely translated: “I love Plato, but I lovetruth even more.” Socrates is treated with a similar combination of respect...
... LanguageHomonymyAmphibolyForm of the ExpressionCompositionDivisionAccent Published by State UniversityofNewYork Press, Albanyâ 2003 StateUniversityofNew York Printed in the United States of AmericaNo part of ... todistinguish between states of affairs that are properly explanatory of someconclusion and states of affairs that only logically entail that same conclusion.In this chapter I also show that Aristotle ... writing of the publisher.For information, address StateUniversityofNewYork Press,90 State Street, Suite 700, Albany, NY 12207Production by Michael HaggettMarketing by Fran KenestonLibrary of...
... case that “relationships [that]develop on the basis of communicated shared interests” are not only Published by State UniversityofNewYork Press, Albanyâ 2004 StateUniversityofNew York All ... agenda of “competitiveness” that has summedup much of what is vital in parties that call themselves conservative to-day—are every bit as impatient of constraints by the old structures of the nation -state, ... much of individuals in the way of moral commitments that restrict the free play of choice, and that virtual communities offer people a means of reapingthe benefits of communicative association...
... thank professor Jay Lampert at the Universityof Guelph for his helpfuleditorial suggestions on parts of the final draft. Schematic Breakdown of the Imagination in Each of the Philosophy of Spirit ... Harris.Albany: StateUniversityofNewYork Press, 1977FirstPhil First Philosophy of Spirit. In The System of Ethical Life(1802/3) and First Philosophy of Spirit (Part II of the System although ... theAbsolute Synthesis of the Identity Theory. The synthesis is not that of a sub-jective faculty but is rather part of the becoming of the Absolute. These state- ments require elaboration.Rather than...
... areincapable of attachment to nature (for reasons argued earlier), can be enlistedon behalf of nature—given, of course, a foundation of nonmoral “natural sen-timent” that affirms nature.But are ... regarding our treatment of the environ-ment—if, that is, we attempt to protect nature through the uncoordinatedand individual volitions of “6 billion points of light”—then clearly the naturalenvironment ... part of who and what wehumans are, delineating more clearly the kind of linkage we have with this world, namely, community membership. Astronomy shows us that Earth ishome, that the fates of...
... analysis of a concept of law but, at least, a declaration of a wish to containroyal power. Its normativity came from baronial force, not logic. Thevindication for Kant’s elaborate imagery of debates ... ssion. We were aware of what it might mean if theybeat us to the draw in the development of atomic bombs.”5One of Heisenberg’s varied rationalizations after 1945 was thatGerman scientists ... of what may be meant by having nochoice in a sense that matters. Homeric heroes frequently reected at length on their fates while knowing at the same time what they weregoing to do and what...
... reconfirmation of their necessity becomes in his state- 8 Surpluseat of every tree of the garden; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of ... concerned. For, God’s explanation why Adamshould not eat of the tree of knowledge is simply that “in the daythat you eat of it you shall die.” Nothing in this statement indi-cates whether Adam should ... Morecapable of explaining such monstrosities is, rather, Kant, whose“specification of the moral law . . . looked at more closely, is sim-ply desire in its pure state, that very desire that culminates...
... Y P Albanyâ 2009 StateUniversityofNew York All rights reservedPrinted in the United States of AmericaNo part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written ... writing of the publisher.For information, contact State UniversityofNewYork Press, Albany, NYwww.sunypress.eduProduction by Dana FooteMarketing by Anne M. ValentineLibrary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication ... IntroductionMonotonization of the world. Strong spiritual impression of all travels of the last years, despite the individual happiness: a pale drab of monotonization of the world. Everything...
... the direction of abetting, and that requires another agentrather than a patient. Abetting is directed at something that can activelytake up the proffered aid, not at something that would passively ... that they are tender and, in Shake-speare’s sonnet, easily “untrimmed,” denuded. Nature is not a concen-tration of the forces of imposition; what is brought forth by nature is notimposed at ... to re-late their thinking to the word of a divine being. It is distinctive of thethinkers who later, i.e., from the time of Plato on, are called “philoso-phers” that their own meditation is...
... left blank. Published by State UniversityofNewYork Press, Albanyâ 2002 StateUniversityofNew York All rights reservedPrinted in the United States of AmericaNo part of this book may be used ... believe that the cry is a result of (i.e., was caused by)her actually being in a stateof distress, for this would involve the attribution of causation to that state. We could not assume that the ... Jane’s latent expression of sickness—the cause and meaning of her stating (and feeling) her fear of headaches at this point—is one of the mean-ings of her statement regarding her fear of headaches.Meaning...