Stretching the Limits of Productive Imagination: Studies in Kantianism, Phenomenology, and Hermeneutics

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Saulius Geniusas
Rowman & Littlefield International, 2018 - Philosophy - 254 pages
How has the concept of productive imagination been developed in post-Kantian philosophy? This important and innovative volume explores this question, with particular focus on hermeneutics, phenomenology and neo-Kantianism. The essays in this collection demonstrate that imagination is productive not only because it fabricates non-existent objects, but also because it shapes human experience and co-determines the meaning of the experienced world. The authors show how imagination forms experience at the kinaesthetic, pre-linguistic, poetic, historical, artistic, social and political levels. The volume offers both a thematic and a historical overview of productive imagination understood as Kant originally wanted us to understand it.

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About the author (2018)

Saulius Geniusas is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is the author of The Origins of the Horizon in Husserl's Phenomenology (Springer 2012), co-editor of Hermeneutics and Phenomenology: Figures and Themes (with Paul Fairfield, Springer, forthcoming), Relational Hermeneutics: Essays in Comparative Philosophy (with Paul Fairfield, Springer, forthcoming), and Phenomenological Ethics (A Special Issue of Santalka: Filosofija, 17/3, 2009).

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