Anxiety
Anxiety
A Philosophical History
Bergo, Bettina
Oxford University Press Inc
01/2021
534
Dura
Inglês
9780197539712
15 a 20 dias
904
Chapter 1. The New Philosophy: Kant's Transcendental Revolution and the Fate of Emotions in German Philosophy
Excursus I. From Kant to Hegel via Philippe Pinel
Chapter 2. Anxiety, Freedom, and Evil: Schelling and Groundless Life
Chapter 3. The Dialectics of Affect: Anxiety and Despair in Kierkegaard
Excursus II. The Universality of Emotions? Darwin's The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872)
Chapter 4. Schopenhauer, Life, and the Affects of the Noumenal
Chapter 5. Nietzsche and the Intensification of the Dialectic of Anxiety: Mourning and Transvaluation
Chapter 6. Freud and the Three Anxieties
Excursus III: Husserl: The Problem of Affective Forces, Einfuehlung, and a Phenomenological Un-conscious
Chapter 7. Heidegger I: Angst in Heidegger's Fundamental Ontology: The Debts to Husserl and Kierkegaard
Chapter 8. Heidegger II Angst, the Temporalization of Dasein, and the Temporality of "Life"
Chapter 9. Emmanuel Levinas and the Anxiety of Intersubjective Origins
General Conclusion
Chapter 1. The New Philosophy: Kant's Transcendental Revolution and the Fate of Emotions in German Philosophy
Excursus I. From Kant to Hegel via Philippe Pinel
Chapter 2. Anxiety, Freedom, and Evil: Schelling and Groundless Life
Chapter 3. The Dialectics of Affect: Anxiety and Despair in Kierkegaard
Excursus II. The Universality of Emotions? Darwin's The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872)
Chapter 4. Schopenhauer, Life, and the Affects of the Noumenal
Chapter 5. Nietzsche and the Intensification of the Dialectic of Anxiety: Mourning and Transvaluation
Chapter 6. Freud and the Three Anxieties
Excursus III: Husserl: The Problem of Affective Forces, Einfuehlung, and a Phenomenological Un-conscious
Chapter 7. Heidegger I: Angst in Heidegger's Fundamental Ontology: The Debts to Husserl and Kierkegaard
Chapter 8. Heidegger II Angst, the Temporalization of Dasein, and the Temporality of "Life"
Chapter 9. Emmanuel Levinas and the Anxiety of Intersubjective Origins
General Conclusion