哲学杂志철학 학술지哲学のジャーナルEast Asian
Journal of
Philosophy

Home > Book Series > Edited Book

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2016

Pages: 7-379

Series: Analecta Husserliana

ISBN (Hardback): 9783319217918

Full citation:

Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, Patricia Trutty-Coohill (eds), The cosmos and the creative imagination, Berlin, Springer, 2016

The cosmos and the creative imagination

Contents

Creative philosophizing

Tying Tymieniecka's "Imaginatio creatrix" to the moral experience of life

Carmen Cozma

13-29

Bachelard and Merleau-Ponty

Is a cosmic flesh of the world feigned or disclosed by imagination?

Annabelle Dufourcq

43-58

Dream and semblance

The play of art and life

Brian Grassom

59-71

Ruach Hakodesh

The epiphanic and cosmic nature of imagination in the art of Michael Jackson and his influence on my image-making

Constance Pierce

103-133

My living body

The zero point of nature-mind and the horizon of creative imagination

Daniel J. Hughes

137-165

Knowledge and the lifeworld

Phenomenological-transcendental investigations

Witold Płotka

167-177

Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Paul Klee

Toward the roots of creative imagination and its cosmic dimension

Lucia Angelino

181-195

American walk

Imagining between earth and sky

Lena Hopsch

209-217

The eternal return

Time and timelessness in P. D. Ouspensky's "Strange life of Ivan Osokin" and Mircea Eliade's "The secret of Dr. Honigberger"

Bruce Ross

253-261

Cosmology in H. D.'s "Trilogy"

Poetics, logos and trace

William Melaney

275-289

Scientific creativity in Malay cosmology

A phenomenological perspective

Samian

297-308

Three cosmic poets

Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Rabindranath Tagore and Ezenwa-Ohaeto, and cosmic nature of imagination

Tony Afejuku

311-319

A short study of "Jisei" (swan songs)

Death, cosmos and its transmigration

Kiyoko Ogawa, Tadashi Ogawa

321-333

Fusing with nature and the cosmos

Shamanic elements in the art of Akiko and Pablo Cesar Amaringo

Bruce Ross

335-343

Cosmic ruminations

The creative imagination, imagined experience, and the lure of distant horizons

Weiss

351-359