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Showing posts with the label consciousness

Carl Gustav Jung and Phenomenology

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  Carl Gustav Jung , a Swiss psychiatrist and the founder of Analytical Psychology, was a key figure in the early development of psychoanalysis alongside Freud. After diverging from Freud, Jung developed Analytical Psychology , which emphasizes both the personal unconscious and the collective unconscious, including the archetypes it contains. The primary aim of this approach is psychological growth and self-realization. Jung explicitly describes the methodology of Analytical Psychology as phenomenological . This means it focuses on subjective experiences, events, and the observable facts they reveal. For Jung, psychological truth is a matter of existence itself, rather than a judgment or evaluation. For instance, when discussing the motif of the “ virgin birth ” in psychology, the focus is not on its factual accuracy but on its presence as an idea. In this way, psychology examines the existence of certain ideas without assessing their objective truth. Within this framework, psychol...

[Review]Daniel C. Dennett_The Intentional Stance (3)

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 Folk science and the Manifest Image “What then do we see when we look at this bustling public world? Among the most complicated and interesting of the phenomena are the doings of our fellow human beings. If we try to predict and describe them using the same methods and concepts we have developed to describe landslides, germination, and magnetism, we can make a few important inroads, but the bulk of their observable macro- activity-their "behavior"-is hopelessly unpredictable from these perspectives. People are even less predictable than the weather, if we rely on the scientific techniques of meteorologists and even biologists. But there is another perspective, familiar to us since childhood and used effortlessly by us all every day, that seems wonderfully able to make sense of this complexity. It is often called folk psychology. It is the perspective that invokes the family of "mentalistic" concepts, such as belief, desire, knowledge, fear, pain, expectation, inten...

[Review]Daniel C. Dennett_The Intentional Stance (1)

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 Setting Off on the Right Foot “Talking about the mind, for many people, is rather like talking about sex: slightly embarrassing, undignified, maybe even disreputable. "Of course it exists," some might say, "but do we have to talk about it?" Yes, we do. Many people would rather talk about the brain (which, after all, is the mind) and would like to think that all the wonderful things we need to say about people could be said without lapsing into vulgar, undisciplined mentalistic talk, but it is now quite clear that many things need saying that cannot be said in the restricted languages of neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, or behavioristic psychology. It is not just the arts and humanities that need to talk about the mind; the various puritanical attempts to complete the biological and social sciences without ever talking about it have by now amply revealed their futility. In fact there is something approaching a new consensus among cognitive scientists and the more libe...

G. W. F. Hegel’s phenomenology and E. Husserl’s phenomenology

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Phenomenology of mind(spirit) „Dies Werden der Wissenschaft überhaupt, oder des Wissens, ist es, was diese Phänomenologie des Geistes, als der erste Teil des Systems derselben, darstellt. Das Wissen, wie es zuerst ist, oder der unmittelbare Geist ist das Geistlose, oder ist das sinnliche Bewußtsein. Um zum eigentlichen Wissen zu werden, oder das Element der Wissenschaft, was ihr reiner Begriff ist, zu erzeugen, hat er durch einen langen Weg sich hindurchzuarbeiten. - Dieses Werden, wie es in seinem Inhalte und den Gestalten, die sich in ihm zeigen, aufgestellt ist, erscheint als etwas anderes denn als die Anleitung des unwissenschaftlichen Bewußtseins zur Wissenschaft; auch etwas anderes als die Begründung der Wissenschaft; - so ohnehin, als die Begeisterung, die wie aus der Pistole mit dem absoluten Wissen unmittelbar anfängt, und mit andern Standpunkten dadurch schon fertig ist, daß sie keine Notiz davon zu nehmen erklärt.“  (G.W.F. Hegel, Phänomenologie des Geistes , Akademic Ve...