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Table of Contents
Introduction: Virginia Woolf and process-oriented thought
Woolf's conception of things and the relation between subject and object
Panpsychism and more-than-human experience in Woolf's fiction
Woolf's process-oriented identity, intersubjective selves, and exploration of community of difference
Woolf's criticism of anthropocentrism and exploitation of nature
Conclusion: Analogies between literature, philosophy, and real life.
Woolf's conception of things and the relation between subject and object
Panpsychism and more-than-human experience in Woolf's fiction
Woolf's process-oriented identity, intersubjective selves, and exploration of community of difference
Woolf's criticism of anthropocentrism and exploitation of nature
Conclusion: Analogies between literature, philosophy, and real life.