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| Author/Contributor(s): |
Tengelyi, Laszlo ; Kallay, Geza
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| Publisher: |
Northwestern University Press
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| Date: |
04/29/2004
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| Binding: |
Paperback
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| Condition: |
NEW
|
A tour de force by one of Hungary's most interesting contemporary philosophers
The Wild Region in Life-History outlines a phenomenological approach to some of the main topics of theoretical philosophy, such as meaning, sense, temporality, unity of life, narrative history, self-identity, and intersubjectivity, as well as an ethics of alterity. In his investigations, László Tengelyi's point of departure is a critical examination of what is commonly referred to as the narrative view of the self, which tends to equate life-history and personal identity. Challenging this view as too one-dimensional and reflective, Tengelyi reveals a hidden area of sense-formation in life-history--an area in which force and meaning do not merely blend but in many ways undermine each other. It is this hidden area that
The Wild Region in Life-History describes.
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