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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Das Problem der "perception" in der Phänomenologie Maurice Merleau-Pontys

Hogemann, Friedrich. January 1973 (has links)
Thesis--Cologne. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 286-299).
22

Reflexive Pädagogisierung : ein phänomenologischer Entwurf /

Hünersdorf, Bettina. January 2000 (has links) (PDF)
Univ., Diss--Trier, 1998.
23

The rhythm of embodied encounters intersubjectivity in Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology /

Verhage, Florentien. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.). / Written for the Dept. of Philosophy. Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2009/06/11). Includes bibliographical references.
24

Das Problem der "perception" in der Phänomenologie Maurice Merleau-Pontys

Hogemann, Friedrich. January 1973 (has links)
Thesis--Cologne. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 286-299).
25

Expression et signification chez Merleau-Ponty /

Viloteau, Jean-Jacques. January 1900 (has links)
Zugl.: Paris, Universit́e Paris 10, thèse de doctorat, 2008.
26

Kontingenz und Sinngenesis; zum Problem von Entfremdung und Geschichte bei Maurice Merleau-Ponty.

Fabian, Rainer, January 1973 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität, Münster. / Bibliography: p. 199-203.
27

Berührung ohne Berührung : Ethik und Ontologie bei Merleau-Ponty und Levinas /

Kapust, Antje. January 1900 (has links)
Diss.--Fachbereich Philosophie--Bochum--Ruhr-Universität, 1995. / Bibliogr. p. 411-430. Index.
28

Linguagem como expressão do corpo

Severo, Daniel Cardozo [UNIFESP] 30 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-07-22T20:50:24Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2012-07-30. Added 1 bitstream(s) on 2015-08-11T03:26:32Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 Publico-DanielCardozoSevero.pdf: 555289 bytes, checksum: fbd11f83bc32b8d37e41fff5013f0668 (MD5) / Este trabalho teve como objetivo central compreender o lugar da linguagem como uma das formas de expressão do corpo. Merleau-Ponty trata desse tema, pela primeira vez e de forma explícita, no último capítulo da primeira parte da obra, Fenomenologia da Percepção, intitulado de O corpo como expressão e a fala. Para esclarecer a relação entre esses três elementos - fala, expressão e corpo - fez-se necessário combater alguns problemas filosóficos que o autor encontra ao colocar a linguagem nesse outro lugar, diferente da concepção defendida pela tradição anterior a ele. O principal deles estaria na base do pensamento ocidental, pois ele pautou-se em premissas equivocadas para compreender a realidade, as quais o autor denominou de pensamento de sobrevoo. A escolha do adjetivo sobrevoo se deu pelo tipo de resposta, científica e filosófica, ao problema da sensação e da percepção encontrado no “realismo ingênuo”, ou seja, a solução dada por eles separaria e reduziria à realidade a dicotomia sujeito/objeto. Desse modo, houve uma deturpação da percepção tanto do corpo quanto da linguagem, porque, com a cisão da realidade, estabeleceu-se a separação corpo e alma, a qual submeteu o primeiro ao último, consagrando a supremacia do pensamento. Nessa soberania, a sujeição da linguagem se deu com o nascimento do conceito de representação, matéria-prima do pensamento. Portanto, para Merleau-Ponty, o primeiro passo a ser dado para a real compreensão do mundo seria retornarmos aos fenômenos originários, tentarmos religar essa relação perdida pelas representações da consciência, por fora dela. Desse modo, com o abandono do pensamento de sobrevoo e com a luta contra o império da representação, o autor revela que a fonte da linguagem seria a fala, modulação existencial do corpo próprio. A fala se apoiaria na intenção do sujeito falante, o qual infla a palavra de significação própria, pois seu sentido adviria do gesto e não do pensamento. Seria pelo interior do gesto que perceberíamos que a palavra é fonte de sentido e não uma representação de algo. A fala nasceria para ampliar a capacidade de movimento do corpo e não para representar os objetos ou suas relações. Ao retomar o sentido instaurado pela percepção, a fala o prolongaria à comunicação. Falar significaria, assim, uma forma de projeção ao mundo e uma forma de evocação das experiências. Retomar-se-ia o passado, seja para dar-lhe um novo sentido (gesto) ou para recordá-lo (hábito). Seria esse o meio que Merleau-Ponty, com a fala, conseguira revelar a última faceta do corpo próprio, reformulando o problema do mundo. / TEDE
29

Abenteuer der Phänomenologie Philosophie und Politik bei Maurice Merleau-Ponty

Faust, Wolfgang January 2007 (has links)
Zugl.: Darmstadt, Techn. Univ., Diss. u.d.T.: Faust, Wolfgang: Maurice Merleau-Ponty
30

Merleau-Ponty's Phenomenology of Painting, Gestalt, and Reversibility

Perez Carrasco, Andres January 2012 (has links)
Thesis advisor: John Sallis / Maurice Merleau-Ponty's last essay about art, Eye and Mind, refers to many painters, to painting, and even to sculpture. Yet there is hardly any use of the traditional categories used in art criticism to categorize artistic movements or to evaluate painters' contributions to their period. Instead, he uses terms such as `body' and `flesh' that are alien to that tradition, thereby indicating that he clearly intends to go beyond commenting on and assessing the artistic value of the works he mentions. Instead, the essay is a reevaluation of meaning of painting as a whole. Merleau-Ponty says that all painting from Lascaux to our day has been a celebration of `the visible.' However, to understand what he means by `the visible' involves considerable complexity. The standard by which Merleau-Ponty evaluates painting emerges from his phenomenological and ontological research into perception. I argue that in fact Eye and Mind answers a question that arose in his first major book concerning the relationship between consciousness and nature. Because the evolution of the ideas underlying the Eye and Mind's answer is so vast, the goal of this dissertation is to trace the thread leading from his earlier work in order to provide a unifying viewpoint that will ground an adequate understanding of the essay's various arguments. The dissertation argues that Merleau-Ponty's notion of the Gestalt or structure is the framework for understanding the origin and depth of the aperçus developed in Eye and Mind. Ironically perhaps, this notion is not mentioned in Eye and Mind. As if it had lost its original meaning, it is only referred to indirectly and vaguely in terms of transcendence. Nevertheless, the main issue settled in The Structure of Behavior dominated his understanding of the body in The Phenomenology of Perception, and underwent a transformation when Merleau-Ponty discovered language as a diacritical structure. This made possible the radical use he made of it in Eye and Mind without expressly mentioning it. Once the interpretation of Gestalt in relation to Paul Klee and Rudolf Arnheim had been worked out, this dissertation could use this notion--usually undervalued in Merleau-Ponty scholarship--to make sense of Eye and Mind's main contention in light of the interpretive reconstruction of the notions of expression, reversibility, body, and flesh Merleau-Ponty elaborated on the way to that essay. Part I of the dissertation deals with the phenomenology of the Gestalt structure prior to Merleau-Ponty's ontological turn, which in turn frames and underpins many of the insights achieved in this pre-ontological period, especially those about the body. The first two chapters introduce the notion of structure as it emerges in its application to behavior, and explain Merleau-Ponty's own contribution to the notion through the overcoming of earlier psychologists' static reduction of the notion to the physical level. The third and last chapter of Part I discusses the structural dimension of the body. There are two extraordinary things in Eye and Mind: the first is Paul Valery's statement that the painter "takes his body with him"; and the second is the analogy between the problems of the body and the problems of painting, by which Merleau-Ponty proposes that understanding one is indispensable for understanding the other. To clarify his proposal we have to return to The Phenomenology of Perception's analysis of the body according to embodied intentionality or motor intentionality, in which the body operates according to an "I can" that must replace the mechanical reaction to a stimulus. Here Merleau-Ponty was helped by Kurt Goldstein's insight into the body as a Gestalt. The dissertation illustrates what this could mean for the structure of a painting by using examples. What was formerly Part II profiles Merleau-Ponty's embodied notion of the Gestalt form against Arnheim's aprioristic account, which explains the relationship between consciousness and nature through an isomorphism that is even more ambitiously totalizing than the ones envisioned by the original Gestalt psychologists. Because of the detailed nature of our account this part is in two appendices. What is now Part II focuses on the problem of painting more directly. Using both the Notes de Cours (where Merleau-Ponty's most extensive comments on Paul Klee occur) and Paul Klee's own celebrated Notes, Chapter Four on Paul Klee reconsiders the relationship between consciousness and nature as the one between the painter and the world. Klee interpreted abstraction in terms of Gestalt as a form of transcendence involving the visible and the invisible, in contrast to Sartre's idea of transcendence, which also employs the figure/ground formation of the Gestalt. In Eye and Mind the expression of painting is interpreted as "a `visible' to the second power, a carnal essence or icon of the first." So Chapters Five and Six discuss the notion of structure from the viewpoint of expression. The doubling of expression in painting is seen first as analogous to philosophy as a hyper-reflection, and then in the linguistic distinction between le langage parlé et le langage parlant, which allowed Merleau-Ponty to interpret and generalize the model of expressive language via the diacritical structure of language and not restrict expressive language to bodily gestures. Rather than a return to the original (as The Phenomenology may have suggested), the point of this doubling aspect of expression is the recognition of the qualities of reversibility and difference that constitute `depth.' With the clarification of terms such as `perceptual faith' and `style,' Chapter Seven introduces the notion of reversibility before exploring its meaning, specifically in the second chapter of Eye and Mind. In Chapter Eight the earlier focus on the beginning of the definition of a painting as "a `visible' to the second power, a carnal essence or icon of the first," shifts to the meaning of the term "icon." This rounds off the meaning of `depth' and completes the exploration of the theme of the Gestalt structure. Now it becomes clear that the meaning of `depth' is articulated as the depth between the visible and the invisible, because the model used to understand depth is the by now very familiar basic articulation of the perceptual Gestalt: the articulation of a figure over a ground. Like a stain on a rug--in painting, in history, in philosophy, in language, or in perceptual faith--the crystallization of what appears always disguises an invisible dimension, whose invisibility is what makes the visibility of the visible possible. Chapter Nine then concludes the dissertation. It first considers Jean-Luc Marion's use of the icon in painting, in which, as in our interpretation of Merleau-Ponty on depth, uses his own idea of the depth between the visible and the invisible; and second, it responds to observations on Merleau-Ponty's philosophy of art by Veronique Fotí and criticisms of it by Michel Haar. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2012. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Philosophy.

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