The Philosophy Book

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274


IN ORDER TO SEE THE


WORLD, WE MUST BREAK


WITH OUR FAMILIAR


ACCEPTANCE OF IT


MAURICE MERLEAU-PONTY (1908–1961)


IN CONTEXT


BRANCH
Epistemology

APPROACH
Phenomenology

BEFORE
4th century BCE Aristotle
claims that philosophy begins
with a sense of wonder.

1641 René Descartes’
Meditations on First Philosophy
establishes a form of mind–
body dualism that Merleau-
Ponty will reject.

Early 1900s Edmund Husserl
founds phenomenology as a
philosophical school.
1927 Martin Heidegger writes
Being and Time, a major
influence on Merleau-Ponty.

AFTER
1979 Hubert Dreyfus draws
on the works of Heidegger,
Wittgenstein, and Merleau-
Ponty to explore philosophical
problems raised by artificial
intelligence and robotics.

T


he idea that philosophy
begins with our ability to
wonder at the world goes
back as far as ancient Greece.
Usually we take our everyday lives
for granted, but Aristotle claimed
that if we want to understand the
world more deeply, we have to put
aside our familiar acceptance of
things. And nowhere, perhaps, is
this harder to do than in the realm

of our experience. After all, what
could be more reliable than the
facts of direct perception?
French philosopher Merleau-
Ponty was interested in looking
more closely at our experience of
the world, and in questioning our
everyday assumptions. This puts
him in the tradition known as
phenomenology, an approach to
philosophy pioneered by Edmund

Our experience is
filled with puzzles and
contradictions.

Our everyday assumptions
prevent us from seeing these
puzzles and contradictions.

We must...

...put our everyday
assumptions to one side.

...relearn to look at
our experience.

In order to see the world,
we must break with our
familiar acceptance of it.
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