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The Origin of Time: Heidegger and Bergson

Albany: SUNY Press (2015)

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  1. Inheritance, Originality and the Will: Bergson and Heidegger on Creation.Mark Sinclair - 2014 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 22 (5):655-675.
    In the work of Henri Bergson and Martin Heidegger we find different responses to traditional ideas of ‘creation’. Bergson advances a philosophy of creation, wherein ‘creation’ is presented as the production of a ‘radical’ or ‘absolute’ novelty, not only in art, but in all forms of human experience and biological life. Heidegger, in contrast, comes to criticise ideas of ‘creation’ in art as the expression of an alienated ‘humanism’ and ‘subjectivism’ essential to the modern age. This paper illuminates this divergence (...)
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  • The time of activity.Theodore R. Schatzki - 2006 - Continental Philosophy Review 39 (2):155-182.
    This essay analyzes the time of human activity. It begins by discussing how most accounts of action treat the time of action as succession, using Donald Davidson's account of action as illustration. It then argues that an adequate account of action and its determinants, one able to elucidate the ``indeterminacy of action,'' requires an alternative conception of action time. The remainder of the essay constructs a propitious account of the time and determination of action. It does so by critically drawing (...)
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  • Ethics between tradition and a new beginning.Thomas Nenon - 1997 - Research in Phenomenology 27 (1):199-207.
  • Bergsonian intuition, Husserlian variation, Peirceian abduction: Toward a relation between method, sense and nature.David Morris - 2005 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 43 (2):267-298.
    Husserlian variation, Bergsonian intuition and Peircean abduction are contrasted as methodological responses to the traditional philosophical problem of deriving knowledge of universals from singulars. Each method implies a correspondingly different view of the generation of the variations from which knowledge is derived. To make sense of the latter differences, and to distinguish the different sorts of variation sought by philosophers and scientists, a distinction between extensive, intensive, and abductive-intensive variation is introduced. The link between philosophical method and the generation of (...)
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  • Bergson Revisited.Leonard Lawlor - 2006 - Symposium 10 (1):35-52.
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  • Why the First Draft ofBeing and Timewas Never Published.Theodore Kisiel - 1989 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 20 (1):3-22.
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  • The Past is to Time what the Idea is to Thought or, What is General in the Past in General?Stephen Crocker - 2004 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 35 (1):42-53.
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  • The Oscillating Now: Heidegger on the Failure of Bergsonism.Stephen Crocker - 1997 - Philosophy Today 41 (3):405-423.
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  • A present folded back on the past (bergson).Rudolf Bernet - 2005 - Research in Phenomenology 35 (1):55-76.
    In Matter and Memory, Bergson examines the relationship between perception and memory, the status of consciousness in its relation to the brain, and more generally, a possible conjunction of matter and mind. Our reading focuses in particular on his understanding of the evanescent presence of the present and of its debt vis-à-vis the "unconscious" consciousness of a "virtual" past. We wish to show that the Bergsonian version of a critique of "the metaphysics of presence" is, for all that, an offshoot (...)
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  • Heidegger and the question of time.Françoise Dastur - 1998 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press.
    "It is a real joy to be guided by Francoise Dastur in a reading of Heidegger's Being and Time, one of the greatest books of this century. With an exceptional competence, rigorous analysis, and a great clarity of expression, she first undertakes to reconstruct the very meaning of the ontological question for which the investigation of temporality provides a preliminary answer." --Paul Ricoeur.
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  • The ekstatico-horizonal constitution of temporality.Françoise Dastur - 1996 - In Christopher E. Macann (ed.), Critical Heidegger. Routledge. pp. 158--170.
     
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  • Bergson in the Making.Maurice Merleau-Ponty - 1982 - In Signs. Evanston, USA: Northwestern University Press. pp. 182-191.