Force of Imagination: The Sense of the ElementalIndiana University Press, 22. sep. 2000 - 256 sider Force of Imagination A bold and original investigation into how imagination shapes thought and feeling. "This is a bold new direction for the author, one that he takes in an arresting and convincing manner. . . . a powerful, original approach to what others call 'ecology' but what Sallis shows to be a question of the status of the earth in philosophical thinking at this historical moment." —Edward S. Casey In this major original work, John Sallis probes the very nature of imagination and reveals how the force of imagination extends into all spheres of human life. While drawing critically on the entire history of philosophy, Sallis's work takes up a vantage point determined by the contemporary deconstruction of the classical opposition between sensible and intelligible. Thus, in reinterrogating the nature of imagination, Force of Imagination carries out a radical turn to the sensible and to the elemental in nature. Liberated from subjectivity, imagination is shown to play a decisive role both in drawing together the moments of our experience of sensible things and in opening experience to the encompassing light, atmosphere, earth, and sky. Set within this elemental expanse, the human sense of time, of self, and of the other proves to be inextricably linked to imagination and to nature. By showing how imagination is formative for the very opening upon things and elements, this work points to the revealing power of poetic imagination and casts a new light on the nature of art. John Sallis is Liberal Arts Professor of Philosophy at Pennsylvania State University. His previous books include Being and Logos: Reading the Platonic Dialogues; Shades—Of Painting at the Limit; Stone; Chorology: On Beginning in Plato's Timaeus (all published by Indiana University Press), Crossings: Nietzsche and the Space of Tragedy and Double Truth. Studies in Continental Thought—John Sallis, editor Contents |
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... remains return to the earth , to its closure . As when , struck down by the violence of a long - forgotten storm , the trunk of a great oak lies on the forest floor , still sheltering and nourishing other living things while itself ...
... remains intact : when one imagines something , what one intends is that thing itself . Sartre is even more unequivocal regarding the fundamental error that 3. See Delimitations : Phenomenology and the End of Metaphysics , 2nd ed ...
... remains outside consciousness merely reverses what it opposes without breaking at all with the alleged source of error : for this assertion is itself no less determined by a thinking in space and in terms of space . One wonders : in ...
... remains as in the corresponding perception , except that “ everything is modified into the quasi , i.e. , the imaginary . " 17 Even in much later texts Husserl does not hesitate to refer in this regard to the quasi - time of the ...
... remains axiomatic in the phenomenology of imagination ; in the very opening of the field it is already assumed . This axiomatic distinction points to the third of the problematic connec- tions . For what it seems necessary to exclude ...
Indhold
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26 | |
2 REMEMBRANCE | 43 |
3 DUPLICITY OF THE IMAGE | 77 |
4 SPACING THE IMAGE | 98 |
5 TRACTIVE IMAGINATION | 123 |
6 THE ELEMENTAL | 147 |
7 TEMPORALITIES | 184 |
8 PROPRIETIES | 197 |
9 POETIC IMAGINATION | 215 |
ENGLISH INDEX | 231 |