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915Intimacy and the face of the other: A philosophical study of infant institutionalization and deprivation. Emotion, Space, and Society.Emotion, Space, and Society 13 80-86. 2014.The orphans of Romania were participants in what is sometimes called “the forbidden experiment”: depriving human infants of intimacy, affection, and human contact is an inhuman practice. It is an experiment which no ethical researcher would set out to do. This paper examines historical data, case histories, and research findings which deal with early deprivation and performs a phenomenological analysis of deprivation phenomena as they impact emotional and physical development. A key element of d…Read more
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885Goethe und die Phänomenologie. Weltanschauung, Methode und NaturphilosophieIn Jonas Maatsch (ed.), Morphologie Und Moderne: Goethes Anschauliches Denken in den Geistes Und Kulturwissenschaften Seit 1800, De Gruyter. pp. 177-194. 2014.Maurice Merleau-Ponty beschreibt die Phänomenologie als einen erkennbaren, praktischen Denkstil, der als Bewegung schon bestand bevor er sich als Philosophie bewusst war. Im Folgenden wird gezeigt, wie Goethe’s naturwissenschaftliches Denken in diesen erkennbaren, praktischen Denkstil der phänomenologischen Bewegung hineinpaßt. Diese Studie über Goethe und die Phänomenologie ist auf drei Themenkreise beschränkt: die phänomenologische Weltanschauung, die von Husserl’s Werk geprägt wurde; die phän…Read more
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505Questioning the Value of Literacy: A phenomenology of speaking and reading in children.In K. Coats (ed.), Handbook of Children’s and Young Adult Literature., Routledge. 2010.The intent of this chapter is to suspend the belief in the goodness of literacy -- our chirographic bias -- in order to gain a deeper understanding of how the engagement with texts structures human consciousness, and particularly the minds of children. In the following pages literacy (a term which in this chapter refers to the ability to read and produce written text) is discussed as a consciousness altering technology. A phenomenological analysis of the act of reading shows the child’s engageme…Read more
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84Milk and flesh: A phenomenological reflection on infancy and coexistenceJournal of Phenomenological Psychology 32 (1): 22-40. 2001.Infants who suffer severe neglect fail to thrive emotionally as well as bodily. The absence of early coexistential structures that provide well-being leads to a narrowing of the child's perceptual and social developmental horizon. What is the nature of these early structures? In this essay, an ontology of well-being or housedness is elaborated through phenomenological reflections on breast-feeding and infant perception. Merleau-Ponty's ontology of the flesh makes a contribution to the ontology o…Read more
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59Eating One’s MotherEnvironmental Ethics 31 (3): 263-277. 2009.Breast milk and the placenta are phenomena of female human embodiment that challenge the philosophical notion of separate, sovereign subjects independent of other human beings and an objective world “out there.” A feminist phenomenological analysis, indebted to Merleau-Ponty and Irigaray, reveals placenta and milk to be intercorporeal, “chiasmic” forms of shared organic existence. This analysis is a philosophical and psychological exploration of “matrotopy,” i.e., the fact that humans eat their…Read more
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50Egocentric Language and the Upheaval of Speech. (English)Chiasmi International 12 287-309. 2010.Le langage égocentré et son dépassement par la parole. Une étude de l’acquisition du langage inspirée de Merleau-PontyDans les notes de travail du Visible et l’invisible, Merleau-Ponty se proposait d’élucider la nature du dépassement de l’être pré-langagier par la parole. Dans ses cours de la Sorbonne, il avait en outre jeté les fondements théoriques d’une confrontation fructueuse entre la linguistique et la psychologie de l’enfant, en ouvrant un dialogue de fond avec la théorie linguistique et …Read more
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49Goethe, Husserl, and the Crisis of the European SciencesJanus Head 8 (1): 160-172. 2005.Goethe belongs to the phenomenological tradition for a number of reasons: He shared Husserl's deep mistrust of the mathematization of the natural world and the ensuing loss of the qualitative dimension of human existence; he understood that the phenomenological observer must free him/herself from sedimented cultural prejudices, a process which Husserl called the epoche; he experienced and articulated the new and surprising fullness of the world as it reveals itself to the patient and participato…Read more
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49The child in the world: Embodiment, time, and language in early childhood.Wayne State University Press. 2008.Illuminates childrens experiences of embodiment, inter-subjectivity, place, thing, time, and language through a dialogue between developmental research and ...
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The infant's experience of the world: Stern, Merleau-ponty and the phenomenology of the preverbal selfHumanistic Psychologist 21 (1): 26-40. 1993.
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Duquesne UniversityDepartment of Philosophy
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Continental Philosophy |