Description
Book SynopsisIn Aesthetic Genesis, the author argues for a reversal of the most fundamental tenet of phenomenology-namely, that all consciousness is intentional (that is, directed toward an object). Mitscherling suggests, as a new Copernican hypothesis, that intentionality (i.e., directionality) gives rise to consciousness. This book describes not only the origin, or genesis, of human cognition in sensation, but also the genesis of sensation from intentional structures belonging to nature itself. A phenomenological examination of our experience leads to the conclusion that the two sorts of being generally recognized by contemporary science and philosophy-that is, material being and ideal being-prove ontologically inadequate to account for this experience. Mitscherling rehabilitates the pre-modern concepts of intentional being and formal causality and employs them in the construction of a comprehensive phenomenological analysis of embodiment, aesthetic experience, the interpretation of texts, moral
Table of ContentsChapter 1 Preface and Acknowledgments Chapter 2 Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 3 Chapter 2: The Negative Lexicon Chapter 4 Chapter 3: Intentionality Chapter 5 Chapter 4: Substance, Form, and Causality Chapter 6 Chapter 5: Mind and Cognition Chapter 7 Chapter 6: Habits, Behavior, Thought, and Language Chapter 8 Bibliography Chapter 9 Index Chapter 10 About the Author