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About The Book
Description
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Philosophy of emotion is a vital topic within contemporary philosophy of mind. Beginning from insights latent in Heideggers early philosophy Wednesdays Child is an argument that with the recognition of a suitable field of consciousness it ought to be possible to speak scientifically about our non-cognitional and non-volitional but nevertheless rational moods in particular that most celebrated mood namely Angst. With the emergence of twentieth-century existentialism and its attention to human experience and with Heideggers revolutionary insight that an emotional mood such as Angst (long-term anxiety or anguish) has intentionality the time was ripe for serious phenomenological work on the emotional aspect of our human being. Much more recently advances in neurological imaging have enabled us to contemplate the phenomenon of human emotion scientifically. At present the new discipline of social neuroscience affords us a philosophical and scientific opportunity to attend to the emotional aspect of our being a long-neglected aspect of our humanity. Proceeding from Heideggers insight regarding the intentionality of moods this book adumbrates a type of social neuroscience capable of validating Heideggers understanding of the centrality of Angst for human being. Wednesdays Child concludes with an Afterthought pointing to the religious and non-religious uses of Angst which the author depicts as a prime datum of our human being and includes a glossary and an appended outline of the books argument. Gregory P. Schulz is Professor of Philosophy at Wisconsin Lutheran College Milwaukee Wisconsin. A graduate of Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary Mequon Wisconsin (MDiv) Concordia Theological Seminary Fort Wayne Indiana (DMin) and Marquette University Milwaukee Wisconsin (PhD Philosophy) he is also the author of The Problem of Suffering and its companion guidebook for Christian caregivers (2011).