Sartre
The psychologists address the problem of the image Because they are captivated by what Sartre calls (and in various contexts wil ...
erroneous initial positions into accepting some form of psychological unconscious – a stance he considers the equivalent of a “r ...
In the final analysis, Sartre insists, the problem is the incompatibility of Bergson’s biologistic psychology with his spiritual ...
corollary to one of the essential features of the image that Sartre’s eidetic reduction inThe Imaginarywill reveal, namely, that ...
In the course of his arguments, Sartre is careful to insist on the epistemological primacy of perception. In this he agrees with ...
The Husserlian solution In light of hints dropped along the way, it should come as no surprise that Sartre describes the publica ...
with the stand of the French Communist Party on a particular issue at that time, he is “reasoning from [his own] principles and ...
consciousness, as popularly conceived, for consciousness has no “inside,” as we have seen. Rather, the image is a way of being “ ...
the noetic consciousness; identically, they are mutually referential.’”^21 But Sartre reads this as sliding Husserl back into th ...
not accept Husserl’s position as explained here, when it comes to the “matter” of mental images.^24 Husserl responds that one mu ...
the classical understanding – or he must make them both active at the expense of his concept of “presentification” (as explained ...
observations of Lagache on the role of respiratory rhythm in auditory hallucinations” (Ion 105 n.). It was to his former classma ...
more immediately, on his psychological studies of the emotions and the imaginary realm. Sketch for a Theory of the Emotions In S ...
intentionality to emotional consciousness. But now it is reenforced by Heideggerian concepts of “being-in-the-world,” “human rea ...
loyal to “the transcendental and constitutive consciousness that we attain through a ‘phenomenological reduction’ or ‘putting th ...
approach to psychological phenomena that begins with the synthetic totality of human reality “in situation” as opposed to the an ...
physiological disturbance of whatever nature cannot account for the “organized character of emotion.” We saw the famous “James-L ...
“interstructural,” not causal. Because of what he will later call the “translucency” of consciousness, he will point out that “t ...
possibly utter remarks indicative of frustration and anger with every futile move. Sartre reads this as the subject’s way of con ...
psychology that leads psychologists toward either materialism or idealism. That strategy will be abundantly clear in his next bo ...
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