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Emotion, Depth, and Flesh: A Study of Sensitive Space

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12 October 1993

Philosophically explores the topic of emotional depth.
This book philosophically explores the topic of emotional depth. The insights of James J. Gibson and Maurice Merleau-Ponty on the nature of perceived depth are compared and then extended to the dynamics of emotional experience and alterations in self-understanding.


"After a decade or two of dominance by behaviorist thinkers, followed by another decade or two of dominance by cognitive theorists, the time is ripe for study of the emotions (and affections in general) to assume center stage. Much evidence indicates that this is indeed happening and Cataldi's work appears just in time. She is a gifted thinker, with tremendous focus and uncanny writing skills." — Robert Marrone, California State University, Sacramento
Acknowledgments
Introduction
I. Depth and Embodiment
1. Flat Affects vs. Deep Emotional Experience
Linguistics Dinstinctions
Sheer Terror
Literary Depictions
2. Depth: Recovering the Hidden Dimension
Depth as the Preception of Ecological "Affordances"
Depth as Copresent Implication
Lived Distance and Living Movements
Depth as the "Dark Space" of Occlusive Permeation
3. Depth and Flesh
The Flesh Ontology
The Openings of Perception
Depth as the Dimension of the Hidden
The Intertwining at the Chiasm
Reversibility as Proximity Through Distance
4. Depth and Reversibility
Depth as a "Break/Brake"
II. Emotion, Depth, and Identity
5. Emotion and Emotional Depth
Emotional Depth and Place Perception
Emotion as a "Living Meaning"
Emotion as a Carnal Idea
6. Emotions "in the Flesh"
Emotion and the Reversibility Thesis
Emotional Depth and 'Being as a Winding'
Touch and Emotional Feeling
Embodied Politics and Border Anxiety
7. Emotional Depth and Alterations in Identity
Emotion, Identity, and Time
Emotional Habits and Leaps of Perception
8. Feeling Deeply About Depth
Notes
Index