This is the exchange at Slate between Dennett and Hubert Dreyfus, who
follows M-P in phenomenological approaches to mind-body, etc. You have
to click on the little numbers after each piece to get to the next
one.
http://www.slate.com/id/3650/entry/23905/
CJ
--
Japan Higher Education Outlook
Antagonism:
Antagonism means "the mutual resistance or active opposition of two
opposing forces, physical or mental; active opposition to a force."
Antagonism is a form of change resolution by annihilation and
nullification. Antagonism as destruction, and nullification is a form of
soc
Antagonism:
Antagonism means "the mutual resistance or active opposition of two
opposing forces, physical or mental; active opposition to a force."
Antagonism is a form of change resolution by annihilation and
nullification. Antagonism as destruction, and nullification is a form of
soci
Dennett runs smack into M-P, but I can't remember if he actually
discusses him (I do remember the quick rendering of Husserl in order
to dismiss him in an earlier work). But this blog explains some more:
http://mikejohnduff.blogspot.com/2007/12/merleau-ponty-and-physicalism.html
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As I recall, Merleau-Ponty
was one of the few continental
philosophers that A.J. Ayer
had any time for. As I recall,
Ayer gave a respectful account
of Merleau-Ponty in his book,
"Philosophy in the Twentieth
Century."
http://books.google.com/books?id=ouELk-xPkGQC&pg=PA433&lpg=PA433&dq=%22+a.j.+