Intercultural Phenomenology : Playing with Reality.
I tiakina i:
Kaituhi matua: | |
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Ētahi atu kaituhi: | |
Hōputu: | iPukapuka |
Reo: | English |
I whakaputaina: |
London :
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc,
2024.
|
Putanga: | 1st ed. |
Rangatū: | Bloomsbury Introductions to World Philosophies Series
|
Urunga tuihono: | Click here to view this book |
Rārangi ihirangi:
- Cover
- Halftitle page
- Bloomsbury Introductions to World Philosophies
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Series Editor Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part One
- 1 An Invitation to Play with Reality
- How My Friend Started Playing
- What is the "Epoché"?
- Taking Off Your Colored Glasses
- Where Does the Epoché Take Us?
- Loosening Your Grip on Perception
- A Short Note on Husserl's Version of the Epoché
- 2 Falling into Play
- Case 1: Encountering the Unfamiliar
- Case 2: Losing Yourself in a Compelling Topic
- Case 3: Seeing More Through Art
- Case 4: Playing With Nature
- 3 Openness, Playfulness, and Freedom
- Husserl: Openness to Phenomena
- Gadamer and Ricoeur: Understanding is Playing
- Nishida: Letting Go of Thinking
- 4 Practicing Playing
- Exercise 1: Playing with Imagination
- Observations
- Exercise 2: Playing with Perception
- Observations
- Exercise 3: Playing With the Subject-Object Reversal
- Observations
- 5 A Conversation with Contemplative Traditions
- Part Two
- 6 Practicing Phenomenology-the Historico-Theoretical Context
- Past, Present, and Potential Forms of Practice
- Husserl's Philosophical Background-Kant's Innovations
- Philosophy and Contemplative Practice
- The Contemplative Approach to Ethics
- Theories Can Guide, But are not Fundamental
- Nishida's Philosophical Perspective
- 7 Practicing Phenomenology-the Personal Side in Practice and "Play"
- The Challenge of Really Practicing
- Natural and Unnatural
- A Major Conversion
- Different Views of What's Possible
- Start with Easy Cases, then Continue
- The Epoché is Crucial, but Still Just a Tool
- Full Circle
- 8 Japanese Perspectives on "Practice," "Nature," and "Play"
- Section 1: "Practice" in Japanese Philosophy
- The Importance of Engagement.
- The Centrality of Impermanence in Japanese Philosophy and Culture
- Types of Knowledge
- Integrating Philosophy, Scholarship and Contemplative Practice
- Contemplation is Important for Everyone
- The Contemplative Dimension of Travel
- Section 2: The Japanese View of Nature
- Section 3: Interpreting the Ten Oxherding Pictures
- Recommended Readings
- Notes
- Bibliography
- INDEX.