Head and Heart: Affection, Cognition, Volition as Triune ConsciousnessFordham University Press, 1997 - 334 pagine Head and Heart proposes a theory of a triune consciousness formed by the heart and mind, composed of an equal partnership of reason, will, and affection. Professor Tallon sets out asking whether and how affective consciousness fits into this triad. By first defining affection in terms of intentionality (as the theory of a triune consciousness is possible only when affectivity has been shown to participate in intentionality), he argues that affection, in its full scope of passion, emotion, and mood, earns a place equal to cognition and volition as a constituent of the human consciousness. Tallon accomplishes his task by proving the existence of affectivity as a distinct kind of consciousness inseparable from the other two, by showing precisely how affection works, how it operates in synthesis with reason and will, and, finally, by offering a new concept of a triune consciousness as paradigm for the human mind. |
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Restoring Feeling to Consciousness | 1 |
The Structure of Consciousness | 17 |
Phenomenology Intentionality Embodiment | 27 |
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Head and Heart: Affection, Cognition, Volition as Triune Consciousness Andrew Tallon Visualizzazione estratti - 1997 |
Head and Heart: Affection, Cognition, Volition as Triune Consciousness Andrew Tallon Anteprima non disponibile - 1997 |
Parole e frasi comuni
action æsthetic affective connaturality affective consciousness affective intentionality affective responses Alquié analogous Aquinas Aquinas's become being-affected body Buber called chapter cognition and volition concept Descartes discursive reason distinct dualism ego-center embodiment emotion enology ethical example experience faculty faculty psychology feeling finite spirit finitude gift ground habit head and heart heart tradition Heidegger hermeneutics higher operational synthesis Hildebrand human nature Husserl idea insight intellectus intentional intersubjectivity intuition ital judgment Karl Rahner knowing knowledge level of consciousness Levinas Lonergan meaning ment Merleau-Ponty mind mode of consciousness mystical ness nonrepresentational object one's oneself ontological perception perfect person Pfänder phenomenology philosophy possible rational relation representational Ricoeur rienced Rousselot Sartre Sartre's says Scheler sciousness self-presence self-transcendence sense solip soul spontaneous Strasser strivings structure sublated Summa theologiae synecdoche Tallon term thesis thinking Thomist thumos tion tional tive transcendence triadic consciousness triune consciousness understanding virtue von Hildebrand will-acts