Conscious and Unconscious Phantasy and the Phenomenology of Dreams

Research in Phenomenology 51 (2):178-199 (2021)
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Abstract

My goal is threefold. First, building on the basis of Husserl’s phenomenology of the imagination, I will argue that phantasy is a specific type of intentional experience, which intends its objects as neutralized presentifications. Second, I will turn to dreams and argue that non-lucid dreams are unconscious phantasies, which cannot be conceived in the above-mentioned way. This realization will bring us to the third task. When recognized as the most extreme form of unconscious phantasy, dreams compel us to raise anew the fundamental question: what is the nature of phantasy experience? According to the perspective I will here develop, phantasy is a specific field of experience that lies between two extremes: the fully translucent mode of the as if consciousness and the thoroughly opaque mode of absorption. Most of our phantasies, both conscious and unconscious, voluntary and involuntary, are lived somewhere between these two extremes.

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Saulius Geniusas
Chinese University of Hong Kong

Citations of this work

Prolegomena to a phenomenology of mind-wandering.Saulius Geniusas - 2024 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 23 (2):329-348.
Dream and Worldliness.Ming-Hon Chu - 2022 - Human Studies 45 (4):777-792.

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