---
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title: "- Phenomenology of Perception"
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# - Phenomenology of Perception

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desertcart.com: Phenomenology of Perception: 9780415834339: Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Donald Landes, Taylor Carman: Books

Review: Brilliance in translation - This is the new definitive translation which returns the reader to reading much more of the text than trying to understand the translation of Phenomenology of Perception (PoP), incredibly helpful and scholarly notes, and a powerfully useful index. Included in the margins is reference to the 2005 French edition pagination. For other edition concordances you can google "Concordance of Editions" of MP's POP and thereby coordinate with all other versions, French and English. I think Simon de Beauvoir's quote on the cover jacket (above) summarizes it all--"the human condition is at stake in this book." For fun, here is my summary of the Introduction: Phenomoneology is about describing, not explaining or analyzing, neither constructing nor constituting. I am not a man or a consciousness, but the absolute source. My existence moves out and sustains my physical and social surroundings. I am in and toward the world and it is in the world that I know myself. I know about dreams and reality because I have an experience of the difference, so my problem is to make explicit my primordial knowledge of the "real, " the perception of the world as our idea of the truth. The world is what we perceive. Beauty: Kant demonstrated there is a unity of the imagination and the understanding, a unity of subjects prior to the object. As in beauty there is harmony between the sensible and the concept, between myself and another. The hidden art of the imagination gives rise to discovering of oneself and appreciating oneself, not just as the aesthetic which grounds the unity of consciousness, but also as knowledge. With true/radical reflection: we step back from the world (not withdraw from it) in order to see transcendences, revealing the world's strangeness and paradoxes. Intellectualism is unaware of the problem of others, the world ( they have no "thisness"). The old Cogito devalues the perception of others and of the world. Unless I find myself situated in the world, I can not find others (inter-subjectivity) or the world. Intellectualism breaks with the world by a constituting consciousness rather than by being grasped directly. Empiricism presents the absolute belief in the world as the totality of spatio-temporal events, and treats consciousness as a region of that world. Intellectualism and empricism are "naturalistic" positions which hide true perception. All signification of language is measured by the experience we have of ourselves and this consciousness that we are. Consciousness is the actual presence of myself to myself prior to words, concepts and thematizations. Operative intentionality (qua Husserl) establishes the natural and pre-predicative unity of the world and of our life as seen in our desires, evaluations and landscape. It is the text prior to precise language. Because we are in the world, we are condemned to sense, and to acquire a name in history. The analytic/empirical is the figure upon which the background of the phenomenal lies. Figure and background are thus the structures of consciousness, irreducible to qualities of consciousness. There is a misconception of judgment as perception when it loses its constituting function and becomes an explanatory principle, position taking, knowing for me across all moments. False judgment reduces sensing to appearance, denying evidence of phenomena everywhere. To perceive is not to judge but to grasp a sense immanent in the sensible. Judgment is only true if it follows spontaneous organization and the particular configuration of the phenomena. "I am a consciousness, a singular being who resides nowhere and can make itself present everywhere through intention. Everything that exists, exists as either thing or as consciousness, and there is no in between. The thing is in a place, but perception is nowhere, for if it were situated it could not make other things exist for itself." (p. 39, 2012)
Review: Just As Fascinating and Well-Organized as Being and Nothingness - I read this slowly over the course of a few months, along with a commentary published by George Marshall. Much of my understanding of the book was informed by having read Sartre's Being and Nothingness about 10 months earlier. I would compare POP and BAN to a Windows vs. Mac scenario. Both works are approaching the same complex problem (what the hell is human reality?), with similar but slightly different approaches. Both books are long and quite comprehensive. By the end of each work, you find that you understand the author's overall system of ontological understanding, and can approach new every day problems and experiences from their perspective about how reality is formed. In comparison to Sartre, I found Merleau-Ponty to be more thoughtful about relating ontology to everyday life. Indeed, his embodied ontology moves through the phenomenological method to examine what reality looks like with normal human eyes, rejecting the various scientisms of his day in favor of direct experience (and its limitations). Sartre was much more effective at relating his ontology to human ethics, but I also found that I didn't care for some of his ideas. I don't think we nihilate when forming awareness of ontological objects. I think Merleau-Ponty's vision of a weakly held consciousness that provides the background and formational structures for all moments of objectivity to be a better fit for my experience of the human mind. Whatever you might think of either author, there is a lot of merit to reading both books if you can find the time. They complement and contrast with one another in a way that deepens your understanding of each. Both were intensely influenced by the work of Descartes Husserl, as well as Kant and (esp. for Sartre) Heidigger, whom I look forward to reading in the coming years. If you want a peak at the underlying machine code that's running within your mind, and want to see what it's like to be conscious from the outside, both Phenomenology of Perception and Being and Nothingness are thoughtful and comprehensive works.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #85,597 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #15 in Phenomenological Philosophy #40 in Existentialist Philosophy #222 in Cognitive Psychology (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (291) |
| Dimensions  | 6.13 x 1.57 x 9.25 inches |
| Edition  | 1st |
| ISBN-10  | 0415834333 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-0415834339 |
| Item Weight  | 7.6 ounces |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 610 pages |
| Publication date  | August 9, 2013 |
| Publisher  | Routledge |

## Images

![- Phenomenology of Perception - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71g1fCDG2wL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Brilliance in translation
*by W***E on January 15, 2013*

This is the new definitive translation which returns the reader to reading much more of the text than trying to understand the translation of Phenomenology of Perception (PoP), incredibly helpful and scholarly notes, and a powerfully useful index. Included in the margins is reference to the 2005 French edition pagination. For other edition concordances you can google "Concordance of Editions" of MP's POP and thereby coordinate with all other versions, French and English. I think Simon de Beauvoir's quote on the cover jacket (above) summarizes it all--"the human condition is at stake in this book." For fun, here is my summary of the Introduction: Phenomoneology is about describing, not explaining or analyzing, neither constructing nor constituting. I am not a man or a consciousness, but the absolute source. My existence moves out and sustains my physical and social surroundings. I am in and toward the world and it is in the world that I know myself. I know about dreams and reality because I have an experience of the difference, so my problem is to make explicit my primordial knowledge of the "real, " the perception of the world as our idea of the truth. The world is what we perceive. Beauty: Kant demonstrated there is a unity of the imagination and the understanding, a unity of subjects prior to the object. As in beauty there is harmony between the sensible and the concept, between myself and another. The hidden art of the imagination gives rise to discovering of oneself and appreciating oneself, not just as the aesthetic which grounds the unity of consciousness, but also as knowledge. With true/radical reflection: we step back from the world (not withdraw from it) in order to see transcendences, revealing the world's strangeness and paradoxes. Intellectualism is unaware of the problem of others, the world ( they have no "thisness"). The old Cogito devalues the perception of others and of the world. Unless I find myself situated in the world, I can not find others (inter-subjectivity) or the world. Intellectualism breaks with the world by a constituting consciousness rather than by being grasped directly. Empiricism presents the absolute belief in the world as the totality of spatio-temporal events, and treats consciousness as a region of that world. Intellectualism and empricism are "naturalistic" positions which hide true perception. All signification of language is measured by the experience we have of ourselves and this consciousness that we are. Consciousness is the actual presence of myself to myself prior to words, concepts and thematizations. Operative intentionality (qua Husserl) establishes the natural and pre-predicative unity of the world and of our life as seen in our desires, evaluations and landscape. It is the text prior to precise language. Because we are in the world, we are condemned to sense, and to acquire a name in history. The analytic/empirical is the figure upon which the background of the phenomenal lies. Figure and background are thus the structures of consciousness, irreducible to qualities of consciousness. There is a misconception of judgment as perception when it loses its constituting function and becomes an explanatory principle, position taking, knowing for me across all moments. False judgment reduces sensing to appearance, denying evidence of phenomena everywhere. To perceive is not to judge but to grasp a sense immanent in the sensible. Judgment is only true if it follows spontaneous organization and the particular configuration of the phenomena. "I am a consciousness, a singular being who resides nowhere and can make itself present everywhere through intention. Everything that exists, exists as either thing or as consciousness, and there is no in between. The thing is in a place, but perception is nowhere, for if it were situated it could not make other things exist for itself." (p. 39, 2012)

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Just As Fascinating and Well-Organized as Being and Nothingness
*by R***E on September 14, 2023*

I read this slowly over the course of a few months, along with a commentary published by George Marshall. Much of my understanding of the book was informed by having read Sartre's Being and Nothingness about 10 months earlier. I would compare POP and BAN to a Windows vs. Mac scenario. Both works are approaching the same complex problem (what the hell is human reality?), with similar but slightly different approaches. Both books are long and quite comprehensive. By the end of each work, you find that you understand the author's overall system of ontological understanding, and can approach new every day problems and experiences from their perspective about how reality is formed. In comparison to Sartre, I found Merleau-Ponty to be more thoughtful about relating ontology to everyday life. Indeed, his embodied ontology moves through the phenomenological method to examine what reality looks like with normal human eyes, rejecting the various scientisms of his day in favor of direct experience (and its limitations). Sartre was much more effective at relating his ontology to human ethics, but I also found that I didn't care for some of his ideas. I don't think we nihilate when forming awareness of ontological objects. I think Merleau-Ponty's vision of a weakly held consciousness that provides the background and formational structures for all moments of objectivity to be a better fit for my experience of the human mind. Whatever you might think of either author, there is a lot of merit to reading both books if you can find the time. They complement and contrast with one another in a way that deepens your understanding of each. Both were intensely influenced by the work of Descartes Husserl, as well as Kant and (esp. for Sartre) Heidigger, whom I look forward to reading in the coming years. If you want a peak at the underlying machine code that's running within your mind, and want to see what it's like to be conscious from the outside, both Phenomenology of Perception and Being and Nothingness are thoughtful and comprehensive works.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ An Excellent Book
*by P***N on September 22, 2017*

It is multidisciplinary and the best book so far that explains human condition in an adventurous and realistic fashion. To comprehend its themes and theses is surely very daunting, but it opens new horizons before you and makes your life and living very very interesting. You will learn that your life is ambiguous and contingent and that you are both *a pure consciousness* "who makes [or creates] others and the world (things, objects) exist for [you] and *a body* with "a psychological and historical structure". You are everything that you see and you have this means of escape. In other words, you are absolutely free (because you are a pure consciousness) despite the fact that you have a vulnerable and an aging body through which you are also part and parcel of this world. And you journey in this world towards your death. In brief, in the words of Simone de Beauvoir, Phenomenology of Perception by Maurice Merleau-Ponty is not only a remarkable specialist work but a book that is of interest to the whole of man and to every man; the human condition is at stake in this book."

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