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Author Koch, Philip, 1942-

Title Solitude : a philosophical encounter / Philip Koch.

Imprint Chicago, Ill. : Open Court, ©1994.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 New Britain, Main Library - Non Fiction  128.4 K81    Check Shelf
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Standard Shelving Location  128.4 K76S    Check Shelf
Description xiv, 375 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 363-372) and index.
Contents The Nature of Solitude -- Dimensions -- Near Relations: Loneliness, Isolation, Privacy, Alienation -- Disengagement -- Engaged Disengagement -- The Symmetry of Engagement and Disengagement -- Images of Solitude -- Evaluating Solitude -- The Virtues of Solitude -- The Completions of Encounter -- The Place of Solitude: The Arguments Apriori -- The Place of Solitude: Arguments from Experience -- Objections to Solitude: Some History -- Objections to Solitude: Responses -- Women and Solitude -- A Universal Value?
Summary What is the proper place of solitude in human existence? Some thinkers have claimed that solitude is our truest, most ultimate, metaphysically deepest state of being. Others have maintained the contrary view that it is in encounter that we most truly find ourselves. In Koch's Solitude: A Philosophical Encounter, both solitude and encounter emerge as primary modes of human experience, equally essential for human completion.
This book both joyfully celebrates and carefully analyzes solitude. Professor Koch first explores the roles of perception, emotion, thought, and volition in constructing the experiential world of solitude, then distinguishes solitude from such near-relations as loneliness, isolation, privacy, and alienation. He goes on to explain his surprising discovery: disengaged solitude is threaded through and hemmed around by diminished modes of engagement, while conversely, engagement is limited and hollowed by modes of disengagement. So, it turns out, experiences of solitude and encounter are shot through with each other, leading to a radically new understanding of personal experience.
The author identifies five intrinsic virtues of solitude: Freedom of Action; Attunement to Self; Attunement to Nature; Reflective Perspective; and Creativity. The common objections to solitude - that it is empty, pointless, vain, foolish, lonely, dangerous, unnatural, morbid, self-indulgent, selfish, escapist, evasive of social responsibility, irrelevant for post-modern women, and culturally limited to alienated privilege in late stages of capitalism - are each given their say and then critically dismantled. Professor Koch's discussion includes an overview of historical restrictions on solitude for women, as well as contemporary women's writings on solitude, and a detailed study of the role of solitude in the classics of ancient Taoism.
Subject Solitude.
Solitude. (OCoLC)fst01125561
Einsamkeit (DE-588)4013921-9
Philosophie (DE-588)4045791-6
Other Form: Online version: Koch, Philip, 1942- Solitude. Chicago, Ill. : Open Court, ©1994 (OCoLC)607800291
Online version: Koch, Philip, 1942- Solitude. Chicago, Ill. : Open Court, ©1994 (OCoLC)624342719
ISBN 081269242X (cloth)
9780812692426 (cloth)
0812692438 (paper)
9780812692433 (paper)
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