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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rick Anthony Furtak (Associate Professor, Chair, Associate Professor, Chair, Department of Philosophy, Colorado College)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 21.10cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 14.20cm Weight: 0.386kg ISBN: 9780190492045ISBN 10: 019049204 Pages: 248 Publication Date: 05 April 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsDedication Acknowledgments Part One: The Rational and the Passionate 1. The Intelligence of Emotions: Differing Schools of Thought 2. What the Empirical Evidence Suggests Part Two: On Reasonable Feelings and Embodied Cognition 3. Feeling Apprehensive 4. Emotions as Felt Recognitions Part Three: The Reasons of the Heart 5. On the Emotional A Priori 6. Love's Knowledge; or, The Significance of What We Care About 7. Attunement and Perspectival Truth Bibliography of Works CitedReviewsIn Knowing Emotions, Furtak provides a compelling argument that our emotions are the source of invaluable and irreplaceable truth about ourselves and what truly matters to us. -- Katherine Oktober Matthews, Riding the Dragon: Consolation for Artists and Intellectuals This book is a clear and engaging account of the many ways in which our emotional responses can light up the significance of the world. Furtak's beautifully crafted discussion exhibits the analytical precision of serious philosophical writing, but also, in its handling of literary examples, the interpersonal sensitivity that is required for a rounded appreciation of the contribution of the emotions to the well-lived human life. -- Mark Wynn, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, University of Leeds With compelling arguments, command of the latest scientific research, and an impressive depth of human insight, Rick Furtak's Knowing Emotions makes a most welcome addition to the philosophical literature on emotions. Furtak departs from other defenses of a cognitive conception of emotions by emphasizing the intelligent, world-revealing nature of the living body. He argues convincingly that our embodied emotional responses enable us to perceive features of the world that would otherwise remain unknown to us. Elegantly and clearly written, this book is valuable not only to professional philosophers but also to anyone seeking deeper human understanding. -- Martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, The University of Chicago Rick Furtak's excellent book offers a plausible and attractive view of the nature of the emotions. Writing against the widespread tendency to see emotions as illogical (or alogical) brute psychological occurrences, Furtak reminds us that 'our emotions have a reasonableness or 'logic' of their own.' He is especially skillful when criticizing the hasty and overambitious conclusions frequently drawn from empirical research into the emotions and exposing the unjustified assumptions that are so often smuggled into the interpretations of such research. All in all, this is an enlightening, persuasive, and, I think, important book. Readers who are currently skeptical about the idea that emotions aim at truth may well have their minds changed, while those who are already sympathetic to the basic idea may find their understandings deepened and enriched by Furtak's careful and insightful argumentation. -- Troy Jollimore, California State University, Chico In this original and thoroughly engaging book, Rick Furtak argues that emotions consist in a distinctive kind of bodily cognition, which reveals truths about the world and other people that would otherwise be inaccessible to us. His discussion is clear and compelling throughout, providing important new insights into the relationships between emotion, feeling, evaluation, belief, and interpersonal experience. The book should be essential reading not just for philosophers but for anyone working on emotion. -- Matthew Ratcliffe, Professor for Theoretical Philosophy, University of Vienna In this original and thoroughly engaging book, Rick Furtak argues that emotions consist in a distinctive kind of bodily cognition, which reveals truths about the world and other people that would otherwise be inaccessible to us. His discussion is clear and compelling throughout, providing important new insights into the relationships between emotion, feeling, evaluation, belief, and interpersonal experience. The book should be essential reading not just for philosophers but for anyone working on emotion. * Matthew Ratcliffe, Professor for Theoretical Philosophy, University of Vienna * This book is a clear and engaging account of the many ways in which our emotional responses can light up the significance of the world. Furtak's beautifully crafted discussion exhibits the analytical precision of serious philosophical writing, but also, in its handling of literary examples, the interpersonal sensitivity that is required for a rounded appreciation of the contribution of the emotions to the well-lived human life. * Mark Wynn, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, University of Leeds * With compelling arguments, command of the latest scientific research, and an impressive depth of human insight, Rick Furtak's Knowing Emotions makes a most welcome addition to the philosophical literature on emotions. Furtak departs from other defenses of a cognitive conception of emotions by emphasizing the intelligent, world-revealing nature of the living body. He argues convincingly that our embodied emotional responses enable us to perceive features of the world that would otherwise remain unknown to us. Elegantly and clearly written, this book is valuable not only to professional philosophers but also to anyone seeking deeper human understanding. * Martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, University of Chicago * Rick Furtak's excellent book offers a plausible and attractive view of the nature of the emotions. Writing against the widespread tendency to see emotions as illogical (or alogical) brute psychological occurrences, Furtak reminds us that 'our emotions have a reasonableness or 'logic' of their own.' He is especially skillful when criticizing the hasty and overambitious conclusions frequently drawn from empirical research into the emotions and exposing the unjustified assumptions that are so often smuggled into the interpretations of such research. All in all, this is an enlightening, persuasive, and, I think, important book. Readers who are currently skeptical about the idea that emotions aim at truth may well have their minds changed, while those who are already sympathetic to the basic idea may find their understandings deepened and enriched by Furtak's careful and insightful argumentation. * Troy Jollimore, California State University, Chico * In this original and thoroughly engaging book, Rick Furtak argues that emotions consist in a distinctive kind of bodily cognition, which reveals truths about the world and other people that would otherwise be inaccessible to us. His discussion is clear and compelling throughout, providing important new insights into the relationships between emotion, feeling, evaluation, belief, and interpersonal experience. The book should be essential reading not just for philosophers but for anyone working on emotion. * Matthew Ratcliffe, Professor for Theoretical Philosophy, University of Vienna * This book is a clear and engaging account of the many ways in which our emotional responses can light up the significance of the world. Furtak's beautifully crafted discussion exhibits the analytical precision of serious philosophical writing, but also, in its handling of literary examples, the interpersonal sensitivity that is required for a rounded appreciation of the contribution of the emotions to the well-lived human life. * Mark Wynn, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, University of Leeds * With compelling arguments, command of the latest scientific research, and an impressive depth of human insight, Rick Furtak's Knowing Emotions makes a most welcome addition to the philosophical literature on emotions. Furtak departs from other defenses of a cognitive conception of emotions by emphasizing the intelligent, world-revealing nature of the living body. He argues convincingly that our embodied emotional responses enable us to perceive features of the world that would otherwise remain unknown to us. Elegantly and clearly written, this book is valuable not only to professional philosophers but also to anyone seeking deeper human understanding. * Martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, University of Chicago * Author InformationRick Anthony Furtak is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Colorado College, where he has taught for over twelve years. His research focuses on philosophy of emotions and existential thought. He is also a poet and translator. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |