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Event and Time: Perspectives in Continental Philosophy

Autor Claude Romano, Stephen E. Lewis
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 noi 2013
Contemporary philosophy, from Kant, through Bergson and Husserl, to Heidegger, has assumed that time must be conceived as a fundamental determination of the subject. Time, the thinking goes, is not first in things, but arises more originally from actions, attitudes, or comportments through which a subject or a Dasein temporalizes time, expecting or remembering, anticipating the future or making a decision. Event and Time discusses and analyzes this thesis, tracing its genesis through detailed, rigorous analyses of the philosophy of time in Plato, Aristotle, and Augustine, ultimately showing that, in the development of metaphysics, the understanding of the temporal phenomenon as an inner-temporal phenomenon has made possible time's subjectivization, and imposed its conceptual framework onto metaphysics itself. In light of this analysis, Event and Time argues that time is in fact not thinkable according to metaphysical subjectivity. Instead, the guiding thread for the analysis of time must shift to the evential hermeneutics of the human being, as first developed in Event and World, and now deepened and completed in Event and Time. There currently is, and has been for some time, great interest in the event as a privileged locus for the investigation of a number of central philosophical issues--studies of the event in the thought of Alain Badiou or of Gilles Deleuze, are examples, and events are of interest among philosophers of a more analytic bent, as well (Donald Davidson). Claude Romano's diptych offers a thorough-going phenomenology of the event that has the ability to bring greater clarity and to advance work in this field: he offers both a tour-de-force investigation of the issue from the point of view of the history of philosophy (Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Bergson, Husserl, Heidegger), and, through his presentation of an evential hermeneutics, makes a compelling, rigorous, and original philosophical contribution to the thinking of the event.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780823255344
ISBN-10: 0823255344
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 178 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: ME – Fordham University Press
Seria Perspectives in Continental Philosophy


Cuprins

Preface to the Second French Edition Translator's Note Introduction Part I: The Metaphysics of Time 1. The Traditional Determinations of Time and Their Structural Dependence with Respect to the Phenomenon of Inner-Temporality a. Inner-temporality, as the phenomenological character of what is "in" time b. The phenomenal features of time considered within the horizon of inner-temporality 2. The Paradoxes of the Parmenides 3. Time and Inner-Temporality in Aristotle's Physics, IV 4. Augustine and the Subjectivization of Time Part II: Time 5. The Stakes for a Phenomenology of Time and Its Differentiation from the Metaphysics of Time A. THE GUIDING THREAD OF THE SUBJECT 6. The Aporiae of the Constitution of Time 7. The Ambivalence of Temporality in Zein und Zeit B. THE OTHER GUIDING THREAD: TIME AND CHANGE 8. The Phenomenological Amplitude of the Concept of Change 9. The Inner-Temporality of Facts: First Approach to the Temporal Phenomenon a. Time as order and as succession b. Order without succession: physical objectivism c. Succession without (or before) order: phenomenological idealism 10. The Event as Guiding Thread a. Static analysis: the triple phenomenological determination of the event b. Dynamic analysis: the event as bursting-forth-in-suspension, and its temporalization / taking time c. The dimensionals of time: the instant, the always-already, the future 11. The Event as Temporalization of Time Part III: Temporality 12. From Time to Temporality a. Advenant, event, ex-per-ience b. Temporality and its three vistas 13. The Having-Taken-Place and Memory a. Memory and remembrance b. The evential conditions of memory: the difference between the having-taken-place and the past 14. The Future and Availability a. Expectation and surprise b. Availability as original ex-per-ience of the future 15. The Present and Transformation 16. The Temporal Meaning of Selfhood 17. The Mobility of the Adventure and Freedom 18. The Antithetic Phenomenon of Selfhood and Its Temporal Meaning. An Example: Traumatism 19. Recapitulation: The Articulation of Time and of Temporality 20. The Finitude of Temporality a. The immemorial pre-time of birth b. The unavailable after-time of death c. The adventure's finitude, and the excentricity of its meaning 21. The Unity of My Histories a. The multiplicity of histories b. The unity of my history c. The problem of the world Notes Index

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