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Encyclopedia > Phenomenological life

Phenomenological life is the life considered from a philosophical and rigorously phenomenological point of view. For other uses, see Philosophy (disambiguation). ... This article is about the philosophical movement. ...


Incarnation

It has been defined by the philosopher Michel Henry as what possesses the faculty and the power "to feel and to experience oneself in every point of its being". Michel Henry (10 January 1922–3 July 2002) was a French philosopher and novelist. ...


For Michel Henry, the life is essentially subjective force and affectivity, it consists in a pure subjective experience of oneself which oscillates permanently between suffering and joy. A "subjective force" is not an impersonal, blind and insensitive force like those we meet in nature, but a living and sensible force experienced from the interior and resulting from an inner desire and from a subjective effort of the will to satisfy it. He also establishes a radical opposition between the living flesh endowed with sensibility and the material body, which is by principle insensitive, in his book Incarnation, a philosophy of the flesh. Suffering is any aversive (not necessarily unwanted) experience and the corresponding negative emotion. ... Look up joy in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... For other uses, see Force (disambiguation). ...


The word "phenomenological" refers to phenomenology, which can refer to both subjective experience and a philosophical method to justify the study of such phenomena. What he has called the "absolute phenomenological life" is the subjective life of the individuals reduced to its pure inner manifestation, as we live it and feel it permanently. It is the life as it reveals itself and appears inwardly, its self-revelation: the life is both what reveals and what is revealed. This article is about the philosophical movement. ...


This life is invisible by nature because it never appears in the exteriority of a look, it reveals in itself without gap nor distance. The fact of seeing supposes indeed the existence of a distance and of a separation between what is seen and the one who sees it, between the object that is perceived and the subject who perceives it. A feeling for example can never be seen from the exterior, it never appears in the "horizon of visibility" of the world, it feels itself and experiences itself from the inner of the radical immanence of life. Love can’t be seen, no more than hatred, feelings are felt in the secret of our heart, where no look can penetrate.


This life is composed of sensitivity and affectivity, it is the unity of their manifestation, the affectivity being however the essence of the sensibility as Michel Henry has shown it in his book on The Essence of the Manifestation, which means that any sensation is affective by nature. The life is the foundation of our subjective experience (like the subjective experience of a sorrow, of seeing a color or the pleasure of drinking fresh water in summer) and of our subjective powers (the subjective power of moving the hand or the eyes for example).


This phenomenological definition of life is founded on our concrete subjective experience we make of life in our own existence, it thus corresponds to human life. About the other forms of life studied by biology and from which Heidegger derives its own philosophical conception of life, Michel Henry writes in his book I am the Truth. Toward a Philosophy of Christianity : "Is it not paradoxical for someone who wants to know what life is to go and ask protozoa, or, at best, honeybees ? It is as if we had a relation with life that was every bit as totally external and fragile as the one we have with beings about which we know nothing – or very little. As if we were not ourselves living." Martin Heidegger Martin Heidegger (September 26, 1889 – May 26, 1976) was a German philosopher. ...


References

{{Michel Henry: Incarnation, Barbarism and Belief: An Introduction to the Work of Michel Henry


Michel Henry: Incarnation, Barbarism and Belief: An Introduction to the Work of Michel Henry (Paperback) by Michael O'Sullivan (Author)


I Am the Truth: Toward a Philosophy of Christianity (Cultural Memory in the Present) (Paperback) by Michel Henry (Author), Susan Emanuel (Translator)}}

Image File history File links Question_book-3. ...

See also

For more precision on phenomenological life, see also the articles on the Philosophy of Life and on the Truth of Life. This article needs to be wikified. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Phenomenological life - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (624 words)
Phenomenological life is the life considered from a philosophical and rigorously phenomenological point of view.
The word "phenomenological" refers to phenomenology, which is the science of the phenomenon and a philosophical method which is reduced to study the phenomena as they appear.
This life is composed of sensitivity and affectivity, it is the unity of their manifestation, the affectivity being however the essence of the sensibility as Michel Henry has shown it in his book on The Essence of the Manifestation, which means that any sensation is affective by nature.
Michel Henry - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (5038 words)
For Henry, life is essentially force and affect, it is invisible by essence, it exists within a pure experience of itself which oscillates permanently between suffering and joy, it is an always begun again passage from suffering to joy.
For Henry, life is not an universal, blind, impersonal and abstract substance, it is necessarily the personal and concrete life of a living individual, it carries in it a consubstantial Ipseity which refers to the fact of being itself, to the fact of being a Self.
Life loves itself in an infinite love and never stops to generate itself, it never stops to generate each one of us as its beloved son or daughter in the eternal present of the life.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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