Philosophy for Passengers
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Philosophy for Passengers

Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I
ISBN-13:
9780262543712
Veröffentl:
2022
Erscheinungsdatum:
03.05.2022
Seiten:
222
Autor:
Michael Marder
Gewicht:
216 g
Format:
176x125x16 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Michael Marder is Ikerbasque Research Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country (UPV-EHU). He is the author of The Philosopher s Plant: An Intellectual Herbarium, Dump Philosophy: A Phenomenology of Devastation, and other books.
Ticketing 1
Preboarding 7
The Boarding Process (A): The Basics 13
The Boarding Process (B): The Passenger Society 25
Stop no. 1: Mood 37
Stop no. 2: Time 55
Detour no. 1: No Pasarán! 67
Stop no. 3: Place 75
Stop no. 4: Existence 89
Detour no. 2: Passengers, Hollywood Style 101
Stop no. 5: Transport 109
Stop no. 6: Metaphor 121
Connection/Transfer: Passages 133
Stop no. 7: Reading, Riding 139
Stop no. 8: Security 149
Detour no. 3: "The Yellow Arrow" 161
Stop no. 9: Senses 173
Stop no. 10: Destination, Destiny 191
Disembarking 203
A Note on Images 207
Notes 217
A philosophical guide to passengerhood, with reflections on time, space, existence, boredom, our sense of self, and our sense of the senses.

While there are entire bookstore sections and even entire bookstores devoted to travel, there have been few books on the universal experience of being a passenger. With this book, philosopher Michael Marder fills the gap, offering a philosophical guide to passengerhood. He takes readers from ticketing and preboarding (preface and introduction) through a series of stops and detours (reflections on topics including time, space, existence, boredom, our sense of self, and our sense of the senses) to destination and disembarking (conclusion). 
 
Marder finds that the experience of passengers in the twenty-first century is experience itself, stretching well beyond railroad tracks and airplane flight patterns. On his journey through passengerhood, he considers, among many other things, passenger togetherness, which goes hand in hand with passenger loneliness; flyover country and the idea of placeness; and Descartes in an airplane seat. He tells us that the word metaphor means transport in Greek and discusses the gray area between literalness and metaphoricity; explains the connection between reading and riding; and ponders the difference between destination and destiny. Finally, a Beckettian disembarking: you might not be able to disembark, yet you must disembark. After the voyage in the world ends, the journey of understanding begins.

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