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Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Translator's Note
Introduction: Phenomenology and Life
The Correlational A Priori and the Ontological Meaning of the Subject
The Original Status of Being-Alive
Part 1. The Divisions of Life
1.1. Exteriority and Immanence
Life as It Is Known
Life as It Is Lived
Auto-Affection, Life, and Flesh
The Problem of the Body
1.2. Existence and Incarnation
The Privative Approach to Life
The Intramundanity of Dasein
The Problem of Privative Zoology
Heidegger and Metaphysical Humanism
Incarnate Life
One's Own Body
Flesh and Chiasm
1.3. The Division of Movement
The Structure of Appearing and the Incarnation of Dasein
Super-Objectivity and Hyper-Belonging-To
The Ontological Meaning of the Ego
Dynamic Phenomenology
Movement and the Body of Existence
Perception and Movement
The Division of the Movements
Conclusion: The Epoche of Death
Life and Existence
The Ontology of Death
Part 2. Life and Exteriority
Introduction: The Failure of Bergsonism
Life and Consciousness
The Two Meanings of Life
Human Life
2.1. The Absolute Domains of Survey
The Three Paths to Gaining Access to Absolute Surfaces
The Phenomenal Path
The Biological and Metaphysical Paths
Primary Consciousness and Secondary Consciousness
The Problem of Perceptual Intentionality
Consciousness and Extension
2.2. Metabolism
Vital Activity
Methodological Anthropocentrism and Ontological Biocentrism
Metabolism and Interiority
Exteriority and Sensibility
The Problem of Exteriority
Need and Exteriority
The Ontological Irreducibility of Movement
Desire, Distance, and Movement
Toward a Privative Botany
Life and Nonbeing
2.3. Toward a Privative Anthropology
Consciousness as the Limitation of Life.
Rilke's Perspective
Originary Repression
Part 3. Life and Desire
3.1. Desire as the Essence of Being-Alive
Introduction
The Experience That We Are
Experience as Freedom
Freedom as the Condition of Experience
Desire
Life and Desire
Desire and Need
Metaphysical Desire
Desire and Affectivity
3.2. Desire and the Correlation
The Lack of the Subject
The Search for Oneself in the Other
The Lacking Subject and the Subjective Lack
The Institution of Proximity
The Problem of the Correlation
The Meaning of Proximity
Touch and Vision
The Primordiality of Touch
The Experience of the Limit
The Interweaving of Vision and Touch
3.3. The Subject and the World
Perception and the Incompleteness of Being
Desire and Givenness through Profiles
World, Space, and Time
The Movement of Life
The Instability of the Phenomenon
The Movement of Desire
Conclusion
Index
About the Author.
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Translator's Note
Introduction: Phenomenology and Life
The Correlational A Priori and the Ontological Meaning of the Subject
The Original Status of Being-Alive
Part 1. The Divisions of Life
1.1. Exteriority and Immanence
Life as It Is Known
Life as It Is Lived
Auto-Affection, Life, and Flesh
The Problem of the Body
1.2. Existence and Incarnation
The Privative Approach to Life
The Intramundanity of Dasein
The Problem of Privative Zoology
Heidegger and Metaphysical Humanism
Incarnate Life
One's Own Body
Flesh and Chiasm
1.3. The Division of Movement
The Structure of Appearing and the Incarnation of Dasein
Super-Objectivity and Hyper-Belonging-To
The Ontological Meaning of the Ego
Dynamic Phenomenology
Movement and the Body of Existence
Perception and Movement
The Division of the Movements
Conclusion: The Epoche of Death
Life and Existence
The Ontology of Death
Part 2. Life and Exteriority
Introduction: The Failure of Bergsonism
Life and Consciousness
The Two Meanings of Life
Human Life
2.1. The Absolute Domains of Survey
The Three Paths to Gaining Access to Absolute Surfaces
The Phenomenal Path
The Biological and Metaphysical Paths
Primary Consciousness and Secondary Consciousness
The Problem of Perceptual Intentionality
Consciousness and Extension
2.2. Metabolism
Vital Activity
Methodological Anthropocentrism and Ontological Biocentrism
Metabolism and Interiority
Exteriority and Sensibility
The Problem of Exteriority
Need and Exteriority
The Ontological Irreducibility of Movement
Desire, Distance, and Movement
Toward a Privative Botany
Life and Nonbeing
2.3. Toward a Privative Anthropology
Consciousness as the Limitation of Life.
Rilke's Perspective
Originary Repression
Part 3. Life and Desire
3.1. Desire as the Essence of Being-Alive
Introduction
The Experience That We Are
Experience as Freedom
Freedom as the Condition of Experience
Desire
Life and Desire
Desire and Need
Metaphysical Desire
Desire and Affectivity
3.2. Desire and the Correlation
The Lack of the Subject
The Search for Oneself in the Other
The Lacking Subject and the Subjective Lack
The Institution of Proximity
The Problem of the Correlation
The Meaning of Proximity
Touch and Vision
The Primordiality of Touch
The Experience of the Limit
The Interweaving of Vision and Touch
3.3. The Subject and the World
Perception and the Incompleteness of Being
Desire and Givenness through Profiles
World, Space, and Time
The Movement of Life
The Instability of the Phenomenon
The Movement of Desire
Conclusion
Index
About the Author.