At the end of Being and Nothingness Sartre made the curious claim that his ethical views follow from his ontology and are based on it. Yiwei Zheng argues that there are unbridgeable gaps between Sartre's ontology and ethics that cannot be filled in, and in the process provides a careful study of som
Immanence And Illusion In Sartre’s Ontology Of Consciousness
✍ Scribed by Caleb Heldt
- Publisher
- Palgrave Macmillan
- Year
- 2020
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 231
- Edition
- 1st Edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book is a critical re-evaluation of Jean-Paul Sartre’s phenomenological ontology, in which a theory of egological complicity and self-deception informing his later better known theory of bad faith is developed. This novel reinterpretation offers a systematic challenge to orthodox apprehensions of Sartre’s conceputualization of transcendental consciousness and the role that the ego plays within his account of pre-reflective consciousness. Heldt persuasively demonstrates how an adequate comprehension of Sartre’s theories of negation and reflection can reveal the world as it appears to human consciousness as one in which our reality is capable of becoming littered with illusions. As the foundation upon which the rest of Sartre’s philosophical project is built, it is essential that the phenomenological ontology of Sartre’s early writings be interpreted with clarity. This book provides such a reinterpretation. In doing so, a philosophical inquiry emerges which is genuinely contemporary in its aim and scope and which seeks to demonstrate the significance of Sartre’s thought, not only as significant to the history of philosophy, but to ongoing debates in continental philosophy and philosophy of mind.
✦ Table of Contents
A Revaluation of Sartre’s Ontology......Page 5
What This Work Is Not......Page 15
Note on Translations......Page 17
Acknowledgements......Page 24
Contents......Page 26
A Brief Outline of This Work......Page 28
Abbreviations for Works by Sartre......Page 37
Sartre’s Critique of Hegel’s Logic......Page 39
Sartre and Bergson: An Agreement About Nothingness18......Page 49
Conscious Activity and Nihilating Differentiation: Internal Negation and External Negation......Page 54
Why Is Non-Thetic Awareness So Important?......Page 65
The Origin of Non-Thetic Awareness: Sartre’s Critique of the Cartesian Cogito......Page 69
Apperception and Inner Sense: Immanent Versus Transcendent Unity......Page 77
Immanent Versus Transcendent (Non-)Thetic Awareness......Page 83
Perceptual (Non-)Thetic Awareness and Négatités: Gestaltic Totalization of Actual Multiplicities......Page 96
Psychic (Non-)Thetic Awareness and Négatités: Egological Totalization of Virtual Multiplicities......Page 106
Bodily (Non-)Thetic Awareness: Lived Monadological Totalization......Page 119
Psychic Time-Consciousness as a Multiplicity of Juxtaposition......Page 131
Psychic Time-Consciousness as a Multiplicity of Interpenetration......Page 137
Original Time-Consciousness: A Unity Which Multiplies Itself; or, a Continually Discontinuous Continuity......Page 144
The Nihilating Temporalization of Time and the Nihilating Spatialization of Space......Page 155
The Hegelian Dialectic of Space and Time......Page 168
The Dialectic of Totalization and the Nihilating Spatialization of Psychic Space......Page 175
The Illusion of Immanence......Page 185
Memorial Totalization......Page 198
Texts by Sartre......Page 215
French Texts by Sartre......Page 216
Other Relevant Texts......Page 217
Index......Page 225
✦ Subjects
Ontology
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