What is a Human Being? : A Heideggerian View [ electronic resource ] / by Frederick A. Olafson.
By: Olafson, Frederick A.
Material type: TextSeries: Modern European Philosophy. Publisher: New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009ISBN: 9780511621093 ( e-book ).Subject(s): Philosophy | Twentieth-Century Philosophy | History of Philosophy | History | History of Ideas | Intellectual HistoryGenre/Form: Electronic booksDDC classification: 128 Online resources: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511621093 Click to view Summary: This broad, ambitious study is about human nature, but human nature treated in a way quite different from the scientific account that influences so much of contemporary philosophy. Drawing on certain basic ideas of Heidegger the author presents an alternative to the debate waged between dualists and materialists in the philosophy of mind that involves reconceiving the way we usually think about 'mental' life. Olafson argues that familiar contrasts between the 'physical' and the 'psychological' break down under closer scrutiny. They need to be replaced by a conception of human being in which we are not entities compounded out of body and mind, but unitary entities that are distinguished by 'having a world', which is very different from simply being a part of the world.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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E-Book | WWW | 128 OLA/W (Browse shelf) | Available | EB13 |
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128 LAK/P Philosophy in the flesh : the embodied mind and its challenge to Western thought / | 128 NIE/H Human,all too human / | 128 NOO/H Hume on knowledge / | 128 OLA/W What is a Human Being? : | 128 PEA/H Hume`s system : an examination of the first book of his treatise / | 128 RUH/H Human values and education / | 128 STE/T Ten theories of human nature / |
This broad, ambitious study is about human nature, but human nature treated in a way quite different from the scientific account that influences so much of contemporary philosophy. Drawing on certain basic ideas of Heidegger the author presents an alternative to the debate waged between dualists and materialists in the philosophy of mind that involves reconceiving the way we usually think about 'mental' life. Olafson argues that familiar contrasts between the 'physical' and the 'psychological' break down under closer scrutiny. They need to be replaced by a conception of human being in which we are not entities compounded out of body and mind, but unitary entities that are distinguished by 'having a world', which is very different from simply being a part of the world.
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