Author(s)
Warren, Nicolas deKeywords
conscience du tempscorps vécu
Heidegger
Husserl
imagination
incarnation
perception conscience d’image
Aristote
conscience
corps
donation
éidétique
espèces
esprit
essences
fondation
intuition
Kant
langage
logique
mathématique
nombres
objets
ontologie
passivité
phénoménologie
philosophie ancienne
philosophie contemporaine
philosophie transcendantale
plasticité
Augustin d'Hippone
temps
Klein Jacob
embodiment
Heidegger
Husserl
image-consciousness
imagination
lived-body
perception
time-consciousness
Aristotle
consciousness
body
givenness
species
mind
foundation
Kant
language
logic
mathematics
numeration
ontology
passivity
phenomenology
ancient philosophy
transcendental philosophy
plasticity
time
Augustine
Klein Jacob
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http://methodos.revues.org/2148Abstract
Il n’est pas inhabituel de considérer l’imagination comme une conscience d’objets non réels, ayant la forme d’images internes ou de représentations privées de toute incarnation spatiale. Dans cet article j’interroge la phénoménologie de l’imagination de Husserl à partir de deux questions : l’imagination est-elle un type de conscience d’image ? L’imagination, est-elle privée de toute incarnation spatiale ? Après avoir reconstruit la distinction nette opérée par Husserl entre imagination et conscience d’image (l’imaginaire n’est pas une image mentale interne), j’explore la thèse de Husserl, fort suggestive, selon laquelle toute imagination implique la projection du corps vécu. Loin d’être entièrement dépourvu de spatialité, l’imaginaire exhibe des caractéristiques quasi-spatiales, et il est fondé sur ce qui est « le plus propre » de mon corps vécu – cela même que, pour ainsi dire, j’amène toujours avec moi, même dans les envols les plus éloignés de mon imagination.It is not uncommon to consider the imagination as a consciousness of non-real objects in the form of internal images or representations that are bereft of spatial incarnation. In this paper, I develop Husserl's phenomenology of the imagination along two questions: Is the imagination a type of image-consciousness? Is the imagination entirely bereft of spatial incarnation? After reconstructing Husserl's trenchant decoupling of the imagination from image-consciousness (the imaginary is not an internal mental image), I explore Husserl's suggestive thesis that the imagination involves the projection of the lived-body. Rather than consider the imaginary as entirely bereft of spatiality, the imaginary exhibits quasi-spatial characteristics, and is grounded in the "ownmost" of my lived-body, which, as it were, I always take with me, even to the farthest reaches of my imagination.
Date
2013-04-18Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:revues.org:methodos/2148urn:doi:10.4000/methodos.2148
http://methodos.revues.org/2148
Copyright/License
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessCollections
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