On Becoming Aware: A Pragmatics of Experiencing

Front Cover
Natalie Depraz, Francisco J. Varela, Pierre Vermersch
John Benjamins Publishing, 2003 - 281 pages
This book searches for the sources and means for a disciplined practical approach to exploring human experience. The spirit of this book is pragmatic and relies on a Husserlian phenomenology primarily understood as a method of exploring our experience. The authors do not aim at a neo-Kantian a priori 'new theory' of experience but instead they describe a concrete activity: how we examine what we live through, how we become aware of our own mental life. The range of experiences of which we can become aware is vast: all the normal dimensions of human life (perception, motion, memory, imagination, speech, everyday social interactions), cognitive events that can be precisely defined as tasks in laboratory experiments (e.g., a protocol for visual attention), but also manifestations of mental life more fraught with meaning (dreaming, intense emotions, social tensions, altered states of consciousness). The central assertion in this work is that this immanent ability is habitually ignored or at best practiced unsystematically, that is to say, blindly. Exploring human experience amounts to developing and cultivating this basic ability through specific training. Only a hands-on, non-dogmatic approach can lead to progress, and that is what animates this book. (Series B)
 

Contents

A guide for the perplexed
1
Part I The structural dynamics of becoming aware
13
Part IIThe motivations for the study of experiencing
113
Open conclusion
233
Postface
237
References
241
Glossary of terms
253
Sources
261
Index
263
The series ADVANCES IN CONSCIOUSNESS RESEARCH
282
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