Borrowing conceptual tools from Bergson, this essay asks after the shift in the temporality of life from Merleau-Ponty's Phenomenologie de to perception to his later works. Although the Phenomenologie conceives life in terms of the field of presence of bodily action, later texts point to a life of invisible and immemorial dimensionality. By reconsidering Bergson, but also thereby revising his reading of Husserl, Merleau-Ponty develops a nonserial theory of time in the later works, one that acknowledges the verticality and irreducibility of the past. Life in the flesh relies on unconsciousness or forgetting, on an invisibility that structures its passage.
机构:
Univ Salerno, Dipartimento Filosofia, Via Ponte Don Melillo, I-84084 Fisciano, SA, ItalyUniv Salerno, Dipartimento Filosofia, Via Ponte Don Melillo, I-84084 Fisciano, SA, Italy
Petrini, Enrica Lisciani
DAIMON-REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE FILOSOFIA,
2008,
(44):
: 119
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132