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Acknowledgments; Contents; About the Author; Chapter 1: Introduction: Histories of the Gift and Desire; 1.1 Brief History of the Gift in Phenomenology and French Thought; 1.2 Backgrounds of Desire in Twentieth Century French Philosophy; 1.3 Debating the Gift and Desire: Marion and Derrida; 1.3.1 Derrida on the Gift and Desire; 1.3.2 Marion on the Gift and Desire; 1.4 The Tasks of This Book: A Debate Over Phenomenology; 1.4.1 The Generosity of Things; Additional Works Cited; Part I: Marion, the Gift, and Desire; Chapter 2: Marion's The Adonné or "The Given:" Between Passion and Passivity

2.1 Recent Challenges to Marion's L'adonné; 2.2 Marion's the Adonné: How You See Is How You Get; 2.2.1 Features of the Adonné; 2.2.2 Transcendental Apperception; 2.2.3 Intersubjective Dimensions of the Adonné as "Interloqué"; 2.3 On Saturated Phenomena: Imbued Intuition; 2.3.1 Husserlian Intuition; 2.3.2 Marion's Saturation of Intuition; 2.4 Love and "the Given?:" Tables with Three Legs; Additional Works Cited; Chapter 3: The Manifolds of Desire and Love in Marion's The Erotic Phenomenon; 3.1 Goals of The Erotic Phenomenon; 3.2 Marion's Conceptions of Desire; 3.2.1 The Desire to Know

3.2.2 Desire, Selfhood, and the Erotic Reduction; 3.2.2.1 Desire Provoked by the Erotic Reduction; 3.2.2.2 The Possibility of Desire and the Erotic Reduction; 3.2.3 Desire and Individualization; 3.2.4 Desire Now Proceeding from Love; 3.2.4.1 The Other to Whom One Directs One's Desire; 3.2.5 Desire's Function in the Erotic Reduction; 3.2.6 Desire and the Other; 3.3 Desire's Paradoxes; Additional Works Cited; Chapter 4: Marion on Love and Givenness: Desiring to Give What One Lacks; 4.1 Gift, Desire, and Lack; 4.2 Six Meditations on Desire and Gift; 4.2.1 1st Meditation: Judge Not

4.2.2 2nd Meditation: Giving and Loving Without Return, and at a Loss; 4.2.2.1 In Being the First to Love (and Give); 4.2.2.2 The Suspension of Reciprocity; 4.2.3 3rd Meditation: Desire and Decision, Lacking Intention; 4.2.4 4th Meditation: The Gift One Lacks; 4.2.5 5th Meditation: Love, Lack, and the Other; 4.2.6 6th Meditation: The Paradoxical Gift of Love; 4.3 Lack, Desire, and That About Which One Might Be Certain; 4.4 An "Erotic Reduction to Givenness?"; Additional Works Cited; Part II: Derrida, Desire, and the Gift

Chapter 5: Indifference: Derrida Beyond Husserl, Intentionality, and Desire; 5.1 Desire, Intentionality, and Meaning; 5.1.1 Intentionality and Expression; 5.1.2 Intentionality, and Meaning; 5.1.3 Intentionality and Metaphysics; 5.2 Phenomenology and the Problem of Transcendentals; 5.3 Origin, Teleology, and History; 5.3.1 Teleology; 5.3.2 History; 5.4 Phenomenology as the Metaphysics of Presence; 5.5 Language and Sign; 5.6 Deconstruction of the Will; Additional Works Cited; Chapter 6: Desire in Derrida's Given Time: There is (Es gibt) No Gift Outside the Text; 6.1 Timing the Gift

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