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The Philosophical Imagination Richard Moran (, Harvard)

The Philosophical Imagination By Richard Moran (, Harvard)

The Philosophical Imagination by Richard Moran (, Harvard)


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Summary

The Philosophical Imagination is a collection of essays ranging over a wide range of philosophical themes: from the emotional engagement with fictions, to the functioning of metaphor in poetry and in rhetoric, to the concept of beauty in Kant and in Proust, and the nature of the first-person perspective in thought and action.

The Philosophical Imagination Summary

The Philosophical Imagination: Selected Essays by Richard Moran (, Harvard)

The Philosophical Imagination brings together several of Richard Moran's essays, ranging over a remarkable variety of topics in philosophy of mind and action, aesthetics, and moral psychology. A theme connecting several of the essays is the different ways our capacity for imagination is drawn on in our responsiveness to art, to literature, to the lives of other persons, and in the practice of philosophy itself. Topics explored here include our emotional responses to mimetic works of art, the nature of metaphor as a vehicle of thought and in the work of rhetoric, and the understanding of the concept of beauty, as that is developed in contrasting ways in the work of Immanuel Kant and Marcel Proust. Several of the essays respond to the work of recent and contemporary philosophers such as Bernard Williams, Stanley Cavell, Harry Frankfurt, and Iris Murdoch, in the context of such themes as the philosophical problem of 'other minds', love and practical reason, the legacy of Sartrean existentialism, and the role of history in the disciplinary self-understanding of philosophy. The final group of essays focuses on questions about self-knowledge and the importance of the first-person perspective, developing ideas from Moran's influential book Authority and Estrangement (Princeton 2001). Topics discussed here include the nature of a person's 'practical knowledge' of her own action, the concept of the mental and the differences between self-understanding and the understanding of others, and the ambiguous role of narrative as a form of self-understanding. Throughout there is an attempt to draw out the connections between topics that are often discussed in isolation from each other, and to pursue them in the context of the recognizable human situations and questions which ground them. The essays are written in a vivid, humane, and accessible style which should attract a broad readership, both inside and outside the academic discipline of philosophy.

About Richard Moran (, Harvard)

Brian D. Young Professor of Philosophy, Harvard University. Author of Authority and Estrangement: An Essay on Self-Knowledge (Princeton, 2001), The Story of My Life: Narrative and Self-Understanding (Aquinas Lectures, Marquette University Press, 2015)

Table of Contents

Preface Art and Aesthetics 1. The Expression of Feeling in Imagination 2. Seeing and Believing: Metaphor, Image and Force 3. Artifice and Persuasion: the Work of Metaphor in Aristotle's Rhetoric 4. Kant, Proust and the Appeal of Beauty 5. Cavell on Recognition, Betrayal, and the Photographic Field of Expression 6. Proust and the Limits of the Will Readings of Contemporary Philosophers 7. Cavell on Outsiders and Others 8. Frankfurt on Identification: Ambiguities of Activity in Mental Life 9. On Frankfurt's The Reasons of Love (Princeton 2004) 10. Iris Murdoch and Existentialism 11. Bernard Williams, History, and the "Impurity of Philosophy" Agency and the First Person 12. Interpretation Theory and the First Person 13. Anscombe on Practical Knowledge 14. Anscombe on the Expression of Intention: An Exegesis (co-authored with Martin Stone) 15. Self-knowledge, "Transparency", and the Forms of Activity 16.The Story of My Life: Narrative and Self-Understanding

Additional information

NPB9780190633776
9780190633776
0190633778
The Philosophical Imagination: Selected Essays by Richard Moran (, Harvard)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2017-08-03
344
N/A
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