Proto-Phenomenology, Language Acquisition, Orality and Literacy
Proto-Phenomenology, Language Acquisition, Orality and Literacy
Dwelling in Speech II
Hatab, Lawrence J.
Rowman & Littlefield
03/2022
328
Mole
Inglês
9781538148068
15 a 20 dias
485
Introduction
Chapter 1: Proto-Phenomenology and Language: A Summary of Volume I
1. Proto-Phenomenology and the Lived World
2. The Personal-World
3. The Environing-World
4. The Social-World
5. Projection
6. Temporality
7. Embodiment
8. Disclosure and Interpretation
9. Language
10. Truth and Pluralism
Chapter 2: The Child's World
1. Ecstatic Dwelling
2. The Personal-Social-World
3. The Environing-World
4. Affective Attunement
5. Projection
6. Temporality and History
7. Embodiment
8. On the Way to Language
Chapter 3: Language Acquisition
1. Natural Language
2. The Phenomenological Priority of Language
3. Language Learning and Dwelling
4. The Personal-Social-World
5. Embodiment and the Environing-World
6. Temporality and History
7. Differential Fitness, Development, and Truth
8. Summary
Chapter 4: Orality and Literacy
1. Oral and Written Language: Two Different Worlds?
2. The Alphabet and Learning How to Read and Write
3. Orality in Ancient Greece
4. Elements of Orality and Literacy
5. Proto-Phenomenology and Literacy
Chapter 5: Philosophy and Literacy in the Greek World
1. Greek Myth
2. The Homeric World
3. The Advent of Philosophy
4. Plato and the Poets
5. Literacy and Philosophy
6. Plato and Writing
7. Some Effects of Literacy in Greek Philosophy
Chapter 6: The Transcribed World
1. From Greek to Latin
2. The Evolution of Literacy
3. Print
4. Science and the Book of Nature
5. Representation and Subjectivity
6. Literal and Metaphorical Language
7. A Post-Literate World?
8. Concluding Remarks
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Chapter 1: Proto-Phenomenology and Language: A Summary of Volume I
1. Proto-Phenomenology and the Lived World
2. The Personal-World
3. The Environing-World
4. The Social-World
5. Projection
6. Temporality
7. Embodiment
8. Disclosure and Interpretation
9. Language
10. Truth and Pluralism
Chapter 2: The Child's World
1. Ecstatic Dwelling
2. The Personal-Social-World
3. The Environing-World
4. Affective Attunement
5. Projection
6. Temporality and History
7. Embodiment
8. On the Way to Language
Chapter 3: Language Acquisition
1. Natural Language
2. The Phenomenological Priority of Language
3. Language Learning and Dwelling
4. The Personal-Social-World
5. Embodiment and the Environing-World
6. Temporality and History
7. Differential Fitness, Development, and Truth
8. Summary
Chapter 4: Orality and Literacy
1. Oral and Written Language: Two Different Worlds?
2. The Alphabet and Learning How to Read and Write
3. Orality in Ancient Greece
4. Elements of Orality and Literacy
5. Proto-Phenomenology and Literacy
Chapter 5: Philosophy and Literacy in the Greek World
1. Greek Myth
2. The Homeric World
3. The Advent of Philosophy
4. Plato and the Poets
5. Literacy and Philosophy
6. Plato and Writing
7. Some Effects of Literacy in Greek Philosophy
Chapter 6: The Transcribed World
1. From Greek to Latin
2. The Evolution of Literacy
3. Print
4. Science and the Book of Nature
5. Representation and Subjectivity
6. Literal and Metaphorical Language
7. A Post-Literate World?
8. Concluding Remarks
Glossary
Bibliography
Index