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Why It's OK to Be of Two Minds [Mīkstie vāki]

2.91/5 (13 ratings by Goodreads)
(Vassar College, USA)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 192 pages, height x width: 198x129 mm, weight: 199 g
  • Sērija : Why It's OK
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Sep-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367898624
  • ISBN-13: 9780367898625
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 31,30 €
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 192 pages, height x width: 198x129 mm, weight: 199 g
  • Sērija : Why It's OK
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Sep-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367898624
  • ISBN-13: 9780367898625
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
"Most of us experience the world through competing perspectives. A job or a religion seems important and fulfilling when looked at in one way; but from a different angle they seem tedious or ridiculous. A friend is obtuse from one point of view, wise from another. Continuing to hold both views at once can be unsettling, highlighting conflicts between our own judgments and values, and undermining our ability to live purposefully and effectively. Yet, as Jennifer Church argues in this book, inner conflict can be a good thing, and not just as a temporary road bump on the road to resolution. This book describes several desirable types of "double consciousness"--or being of two minds--and explains why and how they should be maintained. Church looks criticallyat some common ideas about identity, including a popular belief about narratives that suggests our lives should "make sense" as a story. She also examines how empathy can helpfully cause us to be of two minds, and how various forms of irony and laughter enable us to benefit from holding onto opposing views. Finally, Church shows the merit of acknowledging reality while sometimes being guided by fantasy. Why It's OK to Be of Two Minds is for anyone who's held two opposing views simultaneously, which is tosay it's for everyone. Key Features: Argues against a longstanding philosophical idea: that it is important to resolve inner conflicts that result from competing systems of beliefs, Examines the role of empathy and friendship in maintaining a valuable form of double consciousness, Considers how irony and laughter allow us to dedicate ourselves to our particular projects while acknowledging their ultimate insignificance, Shows how fantasies that conflict with our beliefs can make a positive contribution to the way we live our lives"--

Most of us experience the world through competing perspectives. A job or a religion seems important and fulfilling when looked at in one way, but from a different angle they seem tedious or ridiculous. A friend is obtuse from one point of view, wise from another. Continuing to hold both views at once can be unsettling, highlighting confl icts between our own judgments and values and undermining our ability to live purposefully and effectively.

Yet, as Jennifer Church argues in this book, inner conflict can be a good thing, and not just as a temporary road bump on the road to resolution. This book describes several desirable types of “double consciousness” – or being of two minds – and explains why and how they should be maintained. Church looks critically at some common ideas about identity, including a popular belief about narratives that suggests our lives should “make sense” as a story. She also examines how empathy can helpfully cause us to be of two minds, and how various forms of irony and laughter enable us to benefit from holding onto opposing views. Finally, Church shows the merit of acknowledging reality while sometimes being guided by fantasy.

Why It’s OK to Be of Two Minds

is for anyone who’s held two opposing views simultaneously, which is to say it’s for everyone.

Key Features

• Argues against a long-standing philosophical idea: that it is important to resolve inner conflicts that result from competing systems of beliefs.

• Examines the role of empathy and friendship in maintaining a valuable form of double consciousness.

• Considers how irony and laughter allow us to dedicate ourselves to our particular projects while acknowledging their ultimate insignificance.

• Shows how fantasies that conflict with our beliefs can make a positive contribution to the way we live our lives.

Recenzijas

"This is a superb piece of work. Church has got hold of a wonderful topic and what she does with it is hugely impressive. I found every chapter subtle and insightful, full of wonderful examples and acute observations. I came away with the sense of having engaged with a really deep but still accessible piece of philosophy." -Quassim Cassam, University of Warwick "This is a superb piece of work. Church has got hold of a wonderful topic and what she does with it is hugely impressive. I found every chapter subtle and insightful, full of wonderful examples and acute observations. I came away with the sense of having engaged with a really deep but still accessible piece of philosophy." Quassim Cassam, University of Warwick

Introduction 1(8)
One Quarreling With Ourselves
9(38)
Background
9(4)
Criteria and Clarification
13(9)
More Examples
22(2)
The Pros and Cons of Holding Onto Double Consciousness
24(9)
Ending a Quarrel
33(6)
Models for Sustaining a Conflict
39(8)
Two Temporal Doubling
47(32)
Episodic Memories and Imagined Futures
48(7)
Ending the Conflict, or Not
55(8)
Narrated Selves and Folded Selves
63(7)
Three Models, Applied
70(6)
Closing Remarks on the Perception of Time
76(3)
Three Bringing the Other Within
79(32)
Internalized Others
80(4)
Empathizing With Others
84(3)
Loving and Being in Love
87(2)
Possible Resolutions
89(3)
Possible Separations
92(7)
Possible Dissolutions
99(6)
Three Models, Again
105(6)
Four Narrow and Wide Perspectives
111(24)
The Basic Conflict and Its Inescapability
112(6)
The Option of Irony
118(3)
Juggling and Disrupting, Lessons From Laughter and Surrealism
121(5)
The Isometrics Alternative
126(7)
Closing Remarks
133(2)
Five Living As If
135(24)
Comparisons With Physics and Mathematics
143(4)
Performing an Identity
147(3)
Treating People As If They Had Free Will
150(3)
Viewing Values As If They Were Objective
153(2)
Regarding People As If They Were Unified
155(4)
Conclusion 159(4)
Addendum: When It Is Not Okay to Be of Two Minds 163(6)
Notes 169(14)
Works Cited 183(7)
Index 190
Jennifer Church is a Professor of Philosophy at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York. Her research addresses various topics in the philosophy of mind, and she is the author of Possibilities of Perception (2013) and numerous articles on mental divisions and mental health.