Feeling and Imagination: The Vibrant Flux of Our ExistenceRowman & Littlefield, 2001 - 223 էջ This book is a humanistic inquiry into the nature of feeling, with particular emphasis upon the way that imagination, idealization, consummation, and the aesthetic contribute not only to the texture of our experience but also to the values that are generated by means of them. Love, sex, and compassion are studied as modes of attachment that human beings create, very often as the outcome of prior failures in their personal relations. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 37–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
Էջ xi
... relation to whatever cognitive elements that may also exist . The chapters that follow should be read as a single unfolding of speculative thought . Each of them is incomplete without the others . In one place Rousseau begs the ...
... relation to whatever cognitive elements that may also exist . The chapters that follow should be read as a single unfolding of speculative thought . Each of them is incomplete without the others . In one place Rousseau begs the ...
Էջ 1
... relation to the cognitive methods they employ , it tends to ignore the nature of human attachments and the role that ... relations " school of psychiatry examined affective attachment from a somewhat different point of view . I will ...
... relation to the cognitive methods they employ , it tends to ignore the nature of human attachments and the role that ... relations " school of psychiatry examined affective attachment from a somewhat different point of view . I will ...
Էջ 2
... relation to the feelings that a work of art embodies and refines in its own fashion . The singer is engaged in an enterprise that directs her cognitive capacity toward affective goals attainable through the vocal medium . Her ...
... relation to the feelings that a work of art embodies and refines in its own fashion . The singer is engaged in an enterprise that directs her cognitive capacity toward affective goals attainable through the vocal medium . Her ...
Էջ 7
... relations view of human nature promised a new beginning for psychoanalysis . Melanie Klein , D. W. Winnicott , and W. R. D. Fairbairn belonged to this group . Instead of treating drives or instincts as fundamental constants , they ...
... relations view of human nature promised a new beginning for psychoanalysis . Melanie Klein , D. W. Winnicott , and W. R. D. Fairbairn belonged to this group . Instead of treating drives or instincts as fundamental constants , they ...
Էջ 13
... relation to questions about attachment . For that is always in flux , and largely unpredictable . At the end of this book , I return to the perils of believing that reality — above all , the reality of our affective experience — is ...
... relation to questions about attachment . For that is always in flux , and largely unpredictable . At the end of this book , I return to the perils of believing that reality — above all , the reality of our affective experience — is ...
Բովանդակություն
Imagination | 21 |
Idealization | 59 |
Consummation | 95 |
The Aesthetic | 143 |
Affective Failure and Renewal | 179 |
Notes | 209 |
217 | |
About the Author | |
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Common terms and phrases
ability accept achievement actual aesthetic truth affective attachments affective failure affirmative alienation amor fati appraisal art form artistic Aschenbach Attachment Theory attain attitude awareness beauty become behavior believe Bowlby claim cognitive compassion conception consummation consummatory cosmic create creative creatures Death in Venice detachment emotional erotic ethical everything evil existence experience express fact faith feelings fiction Fidelio film Freud Friedrich Nietzsche George Santayana goal happens happiness hedonic ideas imaginary imagination and idealization individual innovative intellect interpersonal love Irving Singer John Bowlby Kant kind libidinal living lover meaning meaningful metaphysical moral Nature of Love Nietzsche object occur opera ourselves person philosophers Plato present Proust Pursuit of Love reason recognize relation religion religious response romantic love romanticism Ryabovich Schopenhauer scientific sense of reality sentiments sexual love social Socrates species Spinoza spirit theory things Thomas Mann thought throughout tragedy Turandot universe women
Սիրված հատվածներ
Էջ ix - The eye of man hath not heard, the ear of man hath not seen, man's hand is not able to taste, his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to report what my dream was.