The problem of difference: Phenomenology and poststructuralism/ Bell, Jeffrey A. - 1st ed. - Toronto: University Of Toronto Press, 1998. - 294 p.

I. The Linguistic and Perceptual Models
1. Truth and Object-ivity
2. The Linguistic Model
3. The Perceptual Model
4. The Paradox of Fulfilment
II. The Perceptual Noema
1. Self-Constitution
2. Morphological Essences
3. The Noema
4. The Perceptual Noema
Concept Theory
Percept Theory
Conclusion
PART 2: MERLEAU-PONTY
m. The Middle Path
1. Merleau-Ponty's 'Noematic Analysis'
2. The Problem of'the Other'
3. Paradox and the Middle Path
IV. From Psychology to Phenomenology
1. Paradox and 'Structure'
2. Behaviour
3. Virtual Reality: The Human/Animal Distinction
4. The 'Primacy of Perception'
V. Merleau-Ponty and the Transcendental Tradition
1. Phenomenology as Transcendental Critique
2. Psychopathology and the Experience of the World
3. The Body-Subject and the Problem of 'the Other'
VI. The Social Self
1. The Paradox of Limitation and Access
2. Art: Reflections on Cezarme
3. Language:
Merleau-Ponty, Wittgenstein, and the 'Private Language'
Argument
The Influence of Saussure
4. Culture: Levi-Strauss and the Social Self
VII. Untaming the Flesh
1. Introduction: Flesh as Differentiating Condition
2. Lefort: Flesh Is Immanence
3. Dillon: Flesh Is Transcendence
4. Flesh and Paradoxa
PART 3: THE POSTSTRUCTURALIST TURN
VIII. Cinema Paradoxa
1. Paradox
2. Cinema
The Mind-Body Problem
Deleuze's Transcendental Critique
Merleau-Ponty Revisited
Peirce's Categories
At the Movies
3. The Poststmcturalist Turn
Conclusion: The Search for 'Rosebud'
1. The Question
2. Husserl
3. Merleau-Ponty
4. Citizen Kane

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