Discusses the life and work of William James, a founder of the study
of psychology. William James (1842-1910) was elder brother to the
novelist Henry James and a founder of the study of psychology. But he
was also a thinker who sought to work across conventional boundaries,
and did not believe in separate disciplines or over-professionalized
ways of thinking. James was above all interested in those moments when
thoughts suddenly come into being, 'hot' and 'alive'. William James is
for anyone who has experienced the personal need for such thinking and
feels the excitement of ideas. It concerns the personal experience of
reading James, involving extensive quotation from his work in relation
to Philip Davis' own inner life and the lives of other readers of
James--a thinker who is defiantly convinced of the fundamental
validity of the inner life in the making of the Real. This book is
about William James's life-writing, writing for the sake of existence,
that puts together a mix of literature, psychology, philosophy, and
biography in the search for purpose and human flourishing, in place of
formal religion. It includes James' interest in his brother's novels
and in Shakespearean drama, as well as Thomas Hardy's pessimistic
challenge to James. Davis is a reader of literature who feels that
readers of novels and poems also need the help of psychology and
philosophy, to get the thinking out, to make it into a working part of
a life. His book is for readers, especially readers of literature,
seeking to create, like William James, a literary way of thinking
outside the realm of literature.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192663115
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter