
Contents
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1.1 Contact 1.1 Contact
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1.2 Facticity/Essence 1.2 Facticity/Essence
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1.3 The Enrootedness of Perception in the Body 1.3 The Enrootedness of Perception in the Body
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1.4 The Enrootedness of Perception in the World 1.4 The Enrootedness of Perception in the World
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1.5 Towards an Indirect Ontology 1.5 Towards an Indirect Ontology
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1.6 Conclusion 1.6 Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter explores Derrida's discussion of Merleau-Ponty in On Touching and then constructs a Merleau-Pontean reply. The question it seeks to answer is whether, after Derrida's critique, we can still speak phenomenologically of worldly meaningfulness. The argument begins by showing how Merleau-Ponty moves beyond the dichotomy of fact and essence. Then, drawing on Merleau-Ponty's notions of style and being of the world, it explores how his insistence on the rootedness of perception in the body and in the world, on the irreducibility of Gestalt forms and on the difference and continuity between perception and expression can construct a position that sits obliquely to Derrida's critique. The chapter ends by arguing that Merleau-Ponty elaborates an indirect ontology in terms of a cosmology of the visible and an empirical pregnancy.
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