Mark Wilson presents a highly original and broad-ranging investigation of the way we get to grips with the world conceptually, and the way that philosophical problems commonly arise from this. Words such as color, shape, solidity exemplify the commonplace conceptual tools we employ to describe and order the world around us. But the world's goods are complex in their behaviors and we often overlook the subtle adjustments that our evaluative terms undergo as their usage becomes gradually adapted to different forms of supportive circumstance. Wilson not only explains how these surprising strategies of hidden management operate, but also tells the astonishing story of how faulty schemes and great metaphysical systems sometimes spring from a simple failure to recognize the innocent wanderings to which our descriptive words are heir. Wilson combines traditional philosophical concerns about human conceptual thinking with illuminating data derived from a large variety of fields including physics and applied mathematics, cognitive psychology, and linguistics. Wandering Significance offers abundant new insights and perspectives for philosophers of language, mind, and science, and will also reward the interest of psychologists, linguists, and anyone curious about the mysterious ways in which useful language obtains its practical applicability.
To avoid these distortions, better descriptive tools are wanted. The nine new essays within this volume illustrate this need for finer discriminations through a range of revealing cases, of both historical and contemporary significance.
The affinity between dreaming and wandering most clearly manifested in a play which is defined as a dream by its very title, a play in which the verb to wander acquires an entirely felicitous significance. (5) Consider now the positive ...
The affinity between dreaming and wandering is most clearly manifested in a play which is defined as a “dream” by its very title, a play in which the verb to wander acquires an entirely felicitous significance.
The affinity between dreaming and wandering most clearly manifested in a play which is defined as a dream by its very title, a play in which the verb to wander acquires an entirely felicitous significance. (5) Consider now the positive ...
Be that as it may, in the process of considering the occurrence of "wandered" in the light of its position, meaning and structural function, I now hope to complement and amplify Pottle's arguments and insights respecting "I wandered ...
The affinity between dreaming and wandering most clearly manifested in a play which is defined as a dream by its very title, a play in which the verb to wander acquires an entirely felicitous significance. (5) Consider now the positive ...
Since the Enlightenment, wandering has been considered dangerous and even criminal when associated with people of color.
The final dreamtext records a recollective return of past phases of being and an anticipatory wandering into a future ... Discursively it is figured as a loss of one's significance, in every sense of the word—one's name, one's identity, ...
Yet by 1936, Jung radically changed the meaning of this term. In his lecture on “Psychological Factors ... Indeed, the change in meaning of wandering can be traced back to Jung's 1912 Transformations and Symbols of the Libido.
knowledge as a good thing, and consequently the term planē, which formerly had only the negative meaning of “being driven astray”, acquires positive connotations that reflect the shift in perception of the act of wandering.