In The Realm of the Senses: A Materialist Theory of Seeing and Feeling

In The Realm of the Senses: A Materialist Theory of Seeing and Feeling

A thorough-going re-elaboration of modern experience via the senses.

In The Realm of the Senses: A Materialist Theory of Seeing and Feeling

A thorough-going re-elaboration of modern experience via the senses.

e-book £6.99 || $9.99

Feb 26, 2016
978-1-78279-050-1

Added to basket
Buy this e-book:
Paperback £18.99 || $30.95

Feb 26, 2016
978-1-78279-051-8

Buy this Paperback from one of these retailers:
Stuart Walton
More books
Categories

Aesthetics, Mind & body, Sociology (general)

Synopsis

The five physical senses of seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting and touching have been held to underpin the complexity of human experience ever since Aristotle first theorised about how they worked. Classical and scholastic philosophy up to the time of the European Enlightenment relegated their operations to its margins, viewing them as at best a distraction from higher thinking, and at worst a positive deception. Paradoxically, what one could not objectively know, the products of the mind, were accorded precedence over the concrete.
From the Romantic era onwards, the senses moved to the centre of speculative thought, and the various dialectical currents of philosophy after Hegel made them interdependent with the intellectual function, which was held to derive most or all of its authority from them. This tendency has continued down to the sensualist, hedonist and anti-intellectual currents of our own day.
In this theoretical consideration of what has been done to the senses in modern experience, Stuart Walton subjects the life of the senses to a further materialist turn, one that refuses a spiritualisation of the material realm, to which contemporary discourses of the body have often fallen prey, while at the same time preserving sensuality from being delivered once again to a sterile idealism.

Reader Reviews

Click on the circles below to see more reviews

You may also be interested in