The view from within : first-person approaches to the study of consciousness
Finna-arvio
The view from within : first-person approaches to the study of consciousness
Tallennettuna:
Ulkoasu |
313 pages : ill. ; 27 cm |
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Kieli |
englanti |
Alkuteoksen kieli |
englanti |
Huomautukset |
Lisäpainokset: Repr. 2002. Special issue of the Journal of consciousness studies. |
Julkaisija |
Thorverton :
Imprint Academic,
1999.
|
Sarja | Journal of consciousness studies, ISSN 1355-8250; 6: 2-3, 1999. |
Luokitus | |
Aiheet | |
Lisätiedot | edited by Francisco J. Varela and Jonathan Shear |
Bibliografia |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN |
0-907845-30-4 sidottu 0-907845-25-8 nidottu |
Kontrolloimaton nimeke |
First-person accounts : why, what, and how Introspection as practice The intuitive experience Body-image, movement and consciousness : examples from a somatic practice in the Feldenkreis method The phenomenological reduction as praxis Present-time consciousness Beyond the fringe : William James on the transitional parts of the stream of consciousness The use of the Husserlian reduction as a method of investigation in psychiatry The Buddhist tradition of Samantha : methods for refining and examining consciousness Pure consciousness : scientific exploration of meditation techniques Six points to ponder There is already a field of systematic phenomenology, and it's called 'psychology' Moving the cursor of consciousness : cognitive science and human welfare Separating first-personness from the other problems of sonsciousness, or 'You had to have been there!' A cognitive way to the transcendental reduction A new model Pure consciousness and cultural studies Theory and experiment in philosophy On the metaphysics of introspection The fringe : a case study in explanatory phenomenology Building materials for the explanatory bridge A 'hermeneutic objection' : language and the inner view The Husserlian phenomenology of consciousness and cognitive science : we can see the path but nobody is on it Words and silence Object, limits and function of consciousness The symbiosis of subjective and experimental approaches to intuition Distinguishing insight from intuition Mental force and the advertence of bare attention Does psychiatry need the Husserlian detour? Intersubjective science Editors' rejoinder to the debate |