Description

Book Synopsis

It is evident from recent political campaigns, such as that of Donald Trump, that the deployment of attention is crucial for political outcomes. Indeed, Trump’s presidency came about in part due to realities that were produced by the media themselves, which required in turn the engagement of public attention. The implication is that the instability and capriciousness that is often associated with attention can be an important influence on the outcomes that are so produced. Drawing on the thought of Martin Heidegger, Lawrence Berger puts forward a new conception of attention as human presence, showing how its state determines the efficacy of public spaces in articulating and achieving visions of the common good. As politicians seek to amass power by capturing attention, citizens can engage in disciplines of attention such as mindfulness in producing a public power that is more appropriately oriented to the welfare of all. Berger argues that the practice of mindfulness can enable enhanced ontological bonds to form between individuals, which can be the basis for more stable and effective political realities. Such bonds are not given structures, but are rather contingent upon the state of attention, which comes about holistically by way of a hermeneutical circle of attention, language, and bodily understanding. This book is a valuable resource for scholars and students of philosophy of mind, political philosophy, phenomenology, and cognitive science.



Trade Review

In a time when the media are mercilessly clamoring for our constant attention, nothing perhaps could be more urgent than a book helping us to understand and work with our ability to exercise attention with due awareness. Larry Berger’s comprehensive, well-researched and insightful study, critically examining the contributions of the empirical sciences while also drawing on the resources of experiential phenomenology and practices of mindfulness, argues in a reader-friendly style for the importance of disciplines of attention in facilitating the kind of mutually satisfying communication necessary for a flourishing democracy.

-- David Kleinberg-Levin, Professor Emeritus, Department of Philosophy, Northwestern University

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Abbreviations

Preface

Introduction

Part I. The Metaphysics of Attention

1. Attention as Extended Presence

2. The Hermeneutical Circle

3. The Ontological Status of Attention

Part II. Attention and the Self

4. Attention as the Manifestation of the Self

5. The Primacy of Attention

6. Attention as The Minimal Self

Part III. Attention and the Political

7. Attention, Language, and World Constitution

8. The Power of Attention

9. Attention as the Way to Being

References

Index

About the Author

The Politics of Attention and the Promise of

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    A Hardback by Lawrence Berger

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      View other formats and editions of The Politics of Attention and the Promise of by Lawrence Berger

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 27/09/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538177259, 978-1538177259
      ISBN10: 1538177250

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      It is evident from recent political campaigns, such as that of Donald Trump, that the deployment of attention is crucial for political outcomes. Indeed, Trump’s presidency came about in part due to realities that were produced by the media themselves, which required in turn the engagement of public attention. The implication is that the instability and capriciousness that is often associated with attention can be an important influence on the outcomes that are so produced. Drawing on the thought of Martin Heidegger, Lawrence Berger puts forward a new conception of attention as human presence, showing how its state determines the efficacy of public spaces in articulating and achieving visions of the common good. As politicians seek to amass power by capturing attention, citizens can engage in disciplines of attention such as mindfulness in producing a public power that is more appropriately oriented to the welfare of all. Berger argues that the practice of mindfulness can enable enhanced ontological bonds to form between individuals, which can be the basis for more stable and effective political realities. Such bonds are not given structures, but are rather contingent upon the state of attention, which comes about holistically by way of a hermeneutical circle of attention, language, and bodily understanding. This book is a valuable resource for scholars and students of philosophy of mind, political philosophy, phenomenology, and cognitive science.



      Trade Review

      In a time when the media are mercilessly clamoring for our constant attention, nothing perhaps could be more urgent than a book helping us to understand and work with our ability to exercise attention with due awareness. Larry Berger’s comprehensive, well-researched and insightful study, critically examining the contributions of the empirical sciences while also drawing on the resources of experiential phenomenology and practices of mindfulness, argues in a reader-friendly style for the importance of disciplines of attention in facilitating the kind of mutually satisfying communication necessary for a flourishing democracy.

      -- David Kleinberg-Levin, Professor Emeritus, Department of Philosophy, Northwestern University

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Abbreviations

      Preface

      Introduction

      Part I. The Metaphysics of Attention

      1. Attention as Extended Presence

      2. The Hermeneutical Circle

      3. The Ontological Status of Attention

      Part II. Attention and the Self

      4. Attention as the Manifestation of the Self

      5. The Primacy of Attention

      6. Attention as The Minimal Self

      Part III. Attention and the Political

      7. Attention, Language, and World Constitution

      8. The Power of Attention

      9. Attention as the Way to Being

      References

      Index

      About the Author

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