Myth and the Limits of ReasonUniversity Press of America, 2004 - 170 pages This inquiry expands on ideas initially worked out in The Depictive Image: Metaphor and Literary Experience (University of Massachusetts Press; November 1988). This study demonstrates how authors as diverse as Kierkegaard, Unamuno, Henry James, and Margaret Atwood employ "mythemic figurations" in ways that disclose defining limits of discursive analytical reason in the domains, respectively, of religious, national-cultural, psychosocial, and psychobiological experience. This revised edition features extensive substantive and stylistic improvements that render the exposition more fully developed and accurate, and the prose more precise and readable. |
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Page 19
... sense of things completely in mythical terms . " The first men of the gentile world , " he declared , " conceived ... sense of perceptual values — a sense that , as John Sallis discerningly indicates , erodes the opposition between ...
... sense of things completely in mythical terms . " The first men of the gentile world , " he declared , " conceived ... sense of perceptual values — a sense that , as John Sallis discerningly indicates , erodes the opposition between ...
Page 21
... sense of understanding how " our Lord Don Quixote ... resumes and includes in himself the immortal soul of my people " ( Tragic Sense of Life , p . 296 ) . This is an interpretation that the orthodox rationalist is likely to misconstrue ...
... sense of understanding how " our Lord Don Quixote ... resumes and includes in himself the immortal soul of my people " ( Tragic Sense of Life , p . 296 ) . This is an interpretation that the orthodox rationalist is likely to misconstrue ...
Page 144
... sense is doubtless what Nicholas Gier has in mind as he explains how one species of logos ( taken as " reason " ) comports with the concept of mythos : the broad notion of reason [ as opposed to " strict reason " ] bridges the gap ...
... sense is doubtless what Nicholas Gier has in mind as he explains how one species of logos ( taken as " reason " ) comports with the concept of mythos : the broad notion of reason [ as opposed to " strict reason " ] bridges the gap ...
Contents
The Legacy of MythosLogos Polarization | 55 |
FOUR | 81 |
Mythical Thinking | 91 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abraham accounts of myth analysis analytical Aqedah articulated Atwood Blumenberg Bronislaw Malinowski Cassirer Cassirer's chapter classical cognitional concepts consciousness context counter-rationalist critical mythemic figuration critique cultural depictive rationality dialectic disclose discursive reason doctrine Don Quixote doppelgänger dramatic Enlightenment epistemological Ernst Cassirer ethical reasoning euhemerist existential experience explain faith Fear and Trembling functioning of myth Giving Birth Golden Bowl Hans Blumenberg Hatab hermeneutic human identify intellectual interpretation Jeanie Jeanie's Kierkegaard Kirk Lévi-Strauss limits of discursive linguistic literary logic logothetic Malinowski meaning Miguel de Unamuno modern mythemic figuration modernist muthos Myth and Philosophy myth as myth mythical thinking mythical thought mythologists mythology mythopoesis mythopoetic mythos and logos narrative Paul Ricoeur perception Phaedrus philosophical Plato Prelude of Fear rationalist myth theory reality reductive reflection scientific self-reflexive sense Silentio Socrates Stambovsky story structuralist structure Symbolism of Evil theories of myth theorists tradition Trans transformative Unamuno understanding University Press Xenophanes