Description

Book Synopsis
By examining the parent-child relationship, Childlike Peace in Merleau-Ponty and Levinas argues that the primordial structure of our personal encounters with others should be understood as a dialectical spiral. Drawing on the work of twentieth-century philosophers Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Emmanuel Levinas, and informed by recent advances in cognitive neuroscience and child development, Brock Bahler develops a phenomenological description of the parent-child relationship in order to articulate an account of intersubjectivity that is fundamentally ethically oriented, dialogical, and mutually dynamic. This dialectical spiralin contrast to Cartesian tradition of the subject and the Hegelian master-slave dialecticsuggests that our lives are equiprimordially interwoven with both the richness of mutual engagement and the responsibility to be for-the-other. The parent-child relationship provides the basis for a theoretical account of intersubjectivity that is marked by a creative interaction

Trade Review
Bahler (religious studies, Univ. of Pittsburgh) describes subjectivity without what he takes to be the errors of the philosophical tradition. The philosophical tradition tends to treat subjectivity as a property of an ego separated from others. This private, subjective world connects with others only through self-interest or shame. Traditional accounts of subjectivity are pessimistic about human relations. Bahler presents an alternative account that is based on the writings of French philosophers Emmanuel Levinas and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Usually these two thinkers are considered to be in sharp disagreement, but Bahler combines their insights by examining their views on the parent-child relation. The parent-child relation is resistant to traditional analysis and reveals a relationship that is best understood as ethical as opposed to interest driven. This leads to a more optimistic reading of human relations. Bahler explores some of the political and social consequences of this view of subjectivity. Though both Levinas and Merleau-Ponty are difficult writers, Bahler's presentation is ...clear and accessible. This is a book for those interested in philosophy and/or child psychology. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE *
Brock Bahler follows the traces of Levinas’ and Merleau-Ponty’s thinking about intersubjectivity, alterity, and ethics, but by treading an unconventional path: he looks for the relationship between self and other and its ethical call in the original bond between infants and parents. It is exciting to follow the spiral of his thought ever deeper into the congruencies and divergences of these philosophers’ thoughts, but always through the touchstone of human primary intersubjectivity. Philosophy encounters developmental psychology and is enriched through contact with its research findings and concepts. Developmental psychology is integrated into philosophical discourse and it suddenly stands in the history of thought as a way of exploring the beginning and unfolding of human consciousness, intersubjectivity, and ethics. Along the way, Bahler offers a thoughtful and convincing ethical account of intersubjectivity as a dialectical spiral, which values the bodily and historical situatedness of the encounter while also preserving the other’s alterity and surplus. -- Eva-Maria Simms, Adrian van Kaam Professor of Psychology, Duquesne University

Table of Contents
Part 1: Levinas and Merleau-Ponty in Dialogue Introduction 1. Ethics and Embodiment: Passivity, Aesthetics, and Culture in the Subject’s Ethical Attunement to the Other 2. Merleau-Ponty and Levinas on the Child’s Pretheoretical Encounter with Others 3. The Parent-Infant Relation as a Response to Modern Accounts of Intersubjectivity: Descartes, Kant, and Hegel 4. The Parent-Infant Relation as a Response Sartre’s Radical Freedom 5. An Alternative Narrative to Freud’s Primal Parricide and an Ontology of Violence 6. Spiraling Selves 7. Spiraling Selves in a Postcolonial World

Childlike Peace in MerleauPonty and Levinas

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    A Hardback by Brock Bahler

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      View other formats and editions of Childlike Peace in MerleauPonty and Levinas by Brock Bahler

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/1/2016 12:08:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498518499, 978-1498518499
      ISBN10: 1498518494

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      By examining the parent-child relationship, Childlike Peace in Merleau-Ponty and Levinas argues that the primordial structure of our personal encounters with others should be understood as a dialectical spiral. Drawing on the work of twentieth-century philosophers Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Emmanuel Levinas, and informed by recent advances in cognitive neuroscience and child development, Brock Bahler develops a phenomenological description of the parent-child relationship in order to articulate an account of intersubjectivity that is fundamentally ethically oriented, dialogical, and mutually dynamic. This dialectical spiralin contrast to Cartesian tradition of the subject and the Hegelian master-slave dialecticsuggests that our lives are equiprimordially interwoven with both the richness of mutual engagement and the responsibility to be for-the-other. The parent-child relationship provides the basis for a theoretical account of intersubjectivity that is marked by a creative interaction

      Trade Review
      Bahler (religious studies, Univ. of Pittsburgh) describes subjectivity without what he takes to be the errors of the philosophical tradition. The philosophical tradition tends to treat subjectivity as a property of an ego separated from others. This private, subjective world connects with others only through self-interest or shame. Traditional accounts of subjectivity are pessimistic about human relations. Bahler presents an alternative account that is based on the writings of French philosophers Emmanuel Levinas and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Usually these two thinkers are considered to be in sharp disagreement, but Bahler combines their insights by examining their views on the parent-child relation. The parent-child relation is resistant to traditional analysis and reveals a relationship that is best understood as ethical as opposed to interest driven. This leads to a more optimistic reading of human relations. Bahler explores some of the political and social consequences of this view of subjectivity. Though both Levinas and Merleau-Ponty are difficult writers, Bahler's presentation is ...clear and accessible. This is a book for those interested in philosophy and/or child psychology. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE *
      Brock Bahler follows the traces of Levinas’ and Merleau-Ponty’s thinking about intersubjectivity, alterity, and ethics, but by treading an unconventional path: he looks for the relationship between self and other and its ethical call in the original bond between infants and parents. It is exciting to follow the spiral of his thought ever deeper into the congruencies and divergences of these philosophers’ thoughts, but always through the touchstone of human primary intersubjectivity. Philosophy encounters developmental psychology and is enriched through contact with its research findings and concepts. Developmental psychology is integrated into philosophical discourse and it suddenly stands in the history of thought as a way of exploring the beginning and unfolding of human consciousness, intersubjectivity, and ethics. Along the way, Bahler offers a thoughtful and convincing ethical account of intersubjectivity as a dialectical spiral, which values the bodily and historical situatedness of the encounter while also preserving the other’s alterity and surplus. -- Eva-Maria Simms, Adrian van Kaam Professor of Psychology, Duquesne University

      Table of Contents
      Part 1: Levinas and Merleau-Ponty in Dialogue Introduction 1. Ethics and Embodiment: Passivity, Aesthetics, and Culture in the Subject’s Ethical Attunement to the Other 2. Merleau-Ponty and Levinas on the Child’s Pretheoretical Encounter with Others 3. The Parent-Infant Relation as a Response to Modern Accounts of Intersubjectivity: Descartes, Kant, and Hegel 4. The Parent-Infant Relation as a Response Sartre’s Radical Freedom 5. An Alternative Narrative to Freud’s Primal Parricide and an Ontology of Violence 6. Spiraling Selves 7. Spiraling Selves in a Postcolonial World

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