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The vehement passions / Philip Fisher.

De Gruyter Princeton University Press eBook-Package Backlist 2000-2013 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Fisher, Philip, 1941-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Emotions (Philosophy).
Physical Description:
1 online resource (279 p.)
Edition:
Course Book
Place of Publication:
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c2002.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Breaking off the ordinary flow of experience, the passions create a state of exception. In their suddenness and intensity, they map a personal world, fix and qualify our attention, and impel our actions. Outraged anger drives us to write laws that will later be enforced by impersonal justice. Intense grief at the death of someone in our life discloses the contours of that life to us. Wonder spurs scientific inquiry. The strong current of Western thought that idealizes a dispassionate world has ostracized the passions as quaint, even dangerous. Intense states have come to be seen as symptoms of pathology. A fondness for irony along with our civic ideal of tolerance lead us to prefer the diluted emotional life of feelings and moods. Demonstrating enormous intellectual originality and generosity, Philip Fisher meditates on whether this victory is permanent-and how it might diminish us. From Aristotle to Hume to contemporary biology, Fisher finds evidence that the passions have defined a core of human nature no less important than reason or desire. Traversing the Iliad, King Lear, Moby Dick, and other great works, he discerns the properties of the high-spirited states we call the passions. Are vehement states compatible with a culture that values private, selectively shared experiences? How do passions differ from emotions? Does anger have an opposite? Do the passions give scale, shape, and significance to our experience of time? Is a person incapable of anger more dangerous than someone who is irascible? In reintroducing us to our own vehemence, Fisher reminds us that it is only through our strongest passions that we feel the contours of injustice, mortality, loss, and knowledge. It is only through our personal worlds that we can know the world.
Contents:
Frontmatter
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
ONE. Passions, Strong Emotions, Vehement Occasions
TWO. Paths among the Passions
THREE. Thoroughness
FOUR. Privacy, Radical Singularity
FIVE. Time
SIX. Rashness
SEVEN. Mutual Fear
EIGHT. The Aesthetics of Fear
NINE. The Radius of the Will
TEN. Anger and Diminution
ELEVEN. Grief
CONCLUSION
NOTES
AUTHOR INDEX
INDEX OF TERMS
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [253]-261) and indexes.
ISBN:
9786612158957
9781400815890
1400815894
9781400814107
1400814103
9781282158955
1282158953
9781400824892
1400824893
OCLC:
52256495

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