... Buckley,
5–22. New York: NewYorkUniversity Press, 1988.
———. “An Essay on Psychoanalytic Theory:Two Theories of Schizophrenia.
Part II Discussion and Re-statement of the Specific Theory of Schizo-
phrenia.” ... Buckley,
177–232. New York: NewYorkUniversity Press, 1988.
Soler, Colette. “The Body in the Teaching of Jacques Lacan.” JCFAR 6 (1995):
6–38.
Verhaeghe, Paul. “The Collapse of the Function of the Father ... Psychosis. Edited by Peter Buckley, 23–48.
New York: NewYorkUniversity Press, 1988.
Martel, J. “A Linguistic Model of Psychosis: Lacan Applied.” The American
Journal of Psychoanalysis 50 (1990): 243–252.
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... Neglect of the Body
historical space or clearing of meaning on the basis of which things
emerge-into-presence as the kinds of things they are. Conceiving of
humans in terms of a space of intelligibility ... (GA 5). “The Origin of
the Work of Art.” In Basic Writings, trans. Albert Hofstadter.
New
York: HarperCollins, 1993.
26
Heidegger’s Neglect of the Body
Heidegger’s use of Stimmung is not to ... Bambach. Albany: StateUniversityof
New York Press, 2002.
DT Gelassenheit. 1955. (GA 16). “Memorial Address.” In Discourse
on Thinking, trans. John Anderson and E. Hans Freund. New
York: Harper...
... type of proof—transcendental proof.
Transcendental proofs have something in common with each of the
other two types of proof. Like proofs based on observation and experience,
transcendental proofs ... Fivefold Routes to the
Principle of Causation
Steven M. Bayne
State UniversityofNewYork Press
32 KANT ON CAUSATION
a cause is separable from the idea of beginning of existence, so too can a
cause ... the results of demonstrations can be found in a number of places. See for
example the Abstract of the Treatise, 650, The beginning of Section IV of the Enquiry, the end
of Section IV of the Enquiry.
45....
... Wyatt Benner and Diane Ganeles of the State
UniversityofNewYork Press, for their meticulous help in editing this
manuscript. For his help with the index, Jerry Larock of Peterborough
also deserves ... Berkeley and Los Angeles: Univer-
sity of California Press, 1982. (Originally published in 1961.)
The Self-overcoming of Nihilism. Albany: StateUniversityof New
York Press, 1990. (Originally published ... mountain” of aloofness, and out
into the world. A distinctive feature of Nishitani’s On Buddhism is his
detailed analysis of the role and meaning of “conscience” in Bud-
dhism. Reminiscent of Heidegger,...
... modes of understanding and reason. Most of Kant’s initial
30 THE GATHERING OF REASON
xii THE GATHERING OF REASON
B
ut is it merely a matter of restoring the issue, of reopening the question
of ... unity:
unity of subject and object, of intuition, of thought, and of intuition and
thought. These four forms of unity within the structure of divine knowing
are the moments which the assembling of the ... most in need of the discipline of
critique; correspondingly, the major part of the Transcendental Doctrine
of Elements is a Transcendental Logic, i.e., an investigation of the role
of (pure) thought...
... including the Sophistical Refutations. Each of these treats a separate field of re-
search—formal logic, theory of proof, theory of discourse, and the theory of
fallacies—which Aristotle approaches ... limited range of models at his disposal, he can
be considered one of the creators of a sober scientific prose style. He is also the
originator of a multitude of technical terms that, by way of their ... logic, a logic of discourse, and a theory of scientific proof, as well as theories
of rhetoric and literature. He explains the various forms of knowledge and con-
structs a theory of their perfect...
... Language
Homonymy
Amphiboly
Form of the Expression
Composition
Division
Accent
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Homonymy and Amphiboly 29
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resolution of this...
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Globalization, Technology,
and Philosophy
32 Darin Barney
bygone era, and in which the pursuit of calculated self-interest is...
... Harris.
Albany: StateUniversityofNewYork Press, 1977
FirstPhil First Philosophy of Spirit. In The System of Ethical Life
(1802/3) and First Philosophy of Spirit (Part II of the System
although ... anonymous readers at the StateUniversityofNewYork Press were enor-
mously helpful and I am very grateful for their fruitful challenges and sugges-
tions. I thank the Universityof Toronto for its ... and
T. M. Knox. Albany: StateUniversityofNewYork Press,
1979
Works by Fichte
Sc.Kn. The Science of Knowledge. Ed. and trans. P. Heath and J.
Lachs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982
WL...
... editors
The worth of persons of oneself and of those with whom we deal—is the
paradigm context of moral evaluation. The invasion of personal interest and
the destruction of personal property ... philosophical appropriation of them. In addi-
tion, ecologists and philosophers of science disagree about the nature of
ecology. McIntosh concludes, “The merits of ecology as the basis of an envi-
ronmental ... paradox
of human ecology.” H. H. Iltis, “Man First, Man Last: The Paradox of Human
Ecology,” BioScience 20 (1970): 820. The issue of the status of values in nature, here
reduced to the confines of...
... information in those days of German activity in the
eld of nuclear ssion. We were aware of what it might mean if they
beat us to the draw in the development of atomic bombs.”
5
One of Heisenberg’s varied ... the deaths of hundreds of
thousands of people” and contemplated suicide when he heard about
Hiroshima.
18
Yet, on the other side, the building of the rst bombs
was not a matter of pure theory ... Tolstoy, scientists
OPPENHEIMER’S
CHOICE
Reections from Moral Philosophy
RICHARD MASON
State UniversityofNewYork Press
32 OPPENHEIMER’S CHOICE
Agrippinus, when Florus was considering whether...
... character of will and aims, the more
powerful the reconfirmation of their necessity becomes in his state-
8 Surplus
eat of every tree of the garden; but of the tree of the knowledge of
good and ... struc-
ture of capital, too, is a manifestation of the structure of secular
causality on the level of economy. What enabled Marx to see this
was the fact that he conceived of nature as a system of commodi-
ties, ... effects of one another, are all effects of the
“natural right of [the] universal nature” of this modernity, and its
“laws or rules.” It is the “universal nature” of modernity to consist
of one...
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All ... experience
of the lack of a word for Being. This speechlessness, this breaking of the
sequence of words for Being, comes to be understood historically as mark-
ing the end of the succession of words...
... in the understanding of causality amount to in
terms of Heidegger’s history of Being, the domain of the original, motivat-
ing events? It is a reflection of the withdrawal of Being; or, more precisely,
it ... choice of examples
that Aristotle expresses his sense of causality, his sense of the “whence.”
Aristotle provides three main sets of examples of this cause. In the
first introduction of it as ... “in the essence of techne
. . . , as the
occurrence and establishment of the unconcealedness of beings, there
lies the possibility of imperiousness, of an unbridled imposition of ends,
which...
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permission in writing of the publisher.
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Production by ... happiness, but of the actual psychic event of happiness
or, in other words, the meaning of being in the stateof happiness. A satisfactory
account of such meaning would refer to other psychic states....