Courageous vulnerability : ethics and knowledge in Proust, Bergson, Marcel, and James
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Courageous vulnerability : ethics and knowledge in Proust, Bergson, Marcel, and James
(Studies in contemporary phenomenology / editor, Chris Bremmers ; associate editors, Arthur Cools, Gert-Jan van der Heiden, v. 2)
Brill, 2010
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Note
Bibliography: p. [243]-246
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This work develops the ethical attitude of courageous vulnerability through the integration of Marcel Proust's novel In Search of Lost Time and the philosophies of Henri Bergson, William James, and Gabriel Marcel. Central to the discussion is the phenomenon of involuntary memory, taken from common experience but "discovered" and made visible by Proust. Through the connection between a variety of themes from both Continental and American schools of thought such as Bergson's phenomenological account of the artist, James' "will to believe," and Marcel's "creative fidelity," the courageously vulnerable individual is shown to take seriously the ethical implications of the knowledge gained from involuntary memories and similar "privileged moments," and do justice to the "something more" which, though part of our experience of ourselves and others, escapes rigid philosophical analysis.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: Privileged Moments and Felt Knowledge
Introduction
Involuntary Memory: An Unusual Pleasure Caused by an
Identity of Sensations
Privileged Moments of the Imagination
Pleasurable Certainty and Wonder
Couvercles, Obligation, and Obstacles to the Search
La realite pressentie: Joy and Sorrow in the Privileged Moment
Felt Knowledge
Epistemic Responsibility
Conclusion
Chapter Two: Courageous Vulnerability and the Bergsonian Artist
Introduction
Bergson: Intuition and Intellect
The Task of the Artist
The Problem of Language and the Freshness of Experience
Courageous Vulnerability: Preliminary Remarks
Courageous Vulnerability at Work
Conclusion
Chapter Three: Vagueness and Mystery
Introduction
Bergson on James, James on Bergson
Vagueness and/in Language
Pragmatic Meaning and Truth
The Sentiment of Rationality and Anhedonia
Anhedonia and the Broken World of A la recherche
Marcel's Distinction between Problem and Mystery
Primary and Secondary Reflection, Despair and Hope
Conclusion
Chapter Four: Crystallization and the Tragedy of Having (a Lover)
Introduction
Stendhal's Crystallization
Albertine a Stone round Which Snow Has Gathered
Love Regained in Absence
Love and the Role of Habit
Love as a Poetical Action: Albertine an Unconscious Thing of Beauty
Love as the Desire to Possess
Th e Tragedy of Having
Th e Tragedy of Desire
Presence Made Impossible by l'avoir-implication
Conclusion
Chapter Five: The Will to Believe in Privileged Moments
Introduction
Religion, Mysticism, and the Privileged Moment
Anhedonia Dispelled by Uneven Paving Stones
Mystical Moments in A la recherche
Th e Place of the Privileged Moment on James' Mystical Ladder
Invitation to a Strenuous Pursuit of Involuntary Memory
Zest and the Mystic Sense of Hidden Meaning
The Will to Believe in Privileged Moments
Conclusion
Chapter Six: The Difficulty of Being Courageously Vulnerable
Introduction
Fidelity and Death in A la recherche
Th e Will to Believe in Presence
Sincups and Effigies: A Critique of Creative Fidelity
Conclusion: The Difficulty of Being Courageously Vulnerable
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
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