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Who One Is - Book 1: Meontology of the 'I': A Transcendental Phenomenology

Who One Is - Book 1: Meontology of the 'I': A Transcendental Phenomenology

James Hart

 

Verlag Springer-Verlag, 2009

ISBN 9781402087981 , 566 Seiten

Format PDF

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  • Information and Knowledge - A Constructive Type-theoretical Approach
    Phenomenology of Life - From the Animal Soul to the Human Mind - Book I. In Search of Experience
    Consciousness - From Perception to Reflection in the History of Philosophy
    Artificial Nutrition and Hydration - The New Catholic Debate
    The Metaphysics of Science - An Account of Modern Science in Terms of Principles, Laws and Theories
    Phenomenology of Life - From the Animal Soul to the Human Mind - Book II. The Human Soul in the Creative Transformation of the Mind
    Thinking in Complexity - The Computational Dynamics of Matter, Mind, and Mankind
    Education in Human Creative Existential Planning
  • Rediscovering Phenomenology - Phenomenological Essays on Mathematical Beings, Physical Reality, Perception and Consciousness
    Philosophy and Design - From Engineering to Architecture
    Ethics, Hunger and Globalization - In Search of Appropriate Policies
    Formal Ontology and Conceptual Realism
    Studies in Hebrew Language and Jewish Culture - Presented to Albert van der Heide on the Occasion of his Sixty-Fifth Birthday
    Virtues and Passions in Literature - Excellence, Courage, Engagements, Wisdom, Fulfilment
    The Arché Papers on the Mathematics of Abstraction
    Blameworthy Belief - A Study in Epistemic Deontologism
 

 

Both volumes of this work have as their central concern to sort out who one is from what one is. In this Book 1, the focus is on transcendental-phenomenological ontology. When we refer to ourselves we refer both non-ascriptively in regard to non-propertied as well as ascriptively in regard to propertied aspects of ourselves. The latter is the richness of our personal being; the former is the essentially elusive central concern of this Book 1: I can be aware of myself and refer to myself without it being necessary to think of any third-personal characteristic; indeed one may be aware of oneself without having to be aware of anything except oneself. This consideration opens the door to basic issues in phenomenological ontology, such as identity, individuation, and substance. In our knowledge and love of Others we find symmetry with the first-person self-knowledge, both in its non-ascriptive forms as well as in its property-ascribing forms. Love properly has for its referent the Other as present through but beyond her properties.
Transcendental-phenomenological reflections move us to consider paradoxes of the 'transcendental person'. For example, we contend with the unpresentability in the transcendental first-person of our beginning or ending and the undeniable evidence for the beginning and ending of persons in our third-person experience. The basic distinction between oneself as non-sortal and as a person pervaded by properties serves as a hinge for reflecting on 'the afterlife'. This transcendental-phenomenological ontology of necessity deals with some themes of the philosophy of religion.


James G. Hart (b. 1936) did a Ph.D. at the University of Chicago after research in Munich on Hedwig Conrad Martius. He taught at Indiana University, Bloomington (USA) from 1971-2001 in the Department of Religious Studies. His writings have been primarily in the area of phenomenology; his teaching was primarily in the philosophy of religion and peace studies. Since retirement he has spent his energy on philosophy and on reform of the criminal justice system.