Antropologia
T. Ingold - Phenomenology & Science
"From a phenomenological standpoint, by contrast, the world emerges with its properties alongside the emergence of the perceiver in person, against the background of involved activity. Since the person is a being-in-the-world, the coming-in-to-being of the person is part and parcel of the process of coming into-being of the world. (...) Yet the scientist, like everyone else, is a being-in-the-world, and scientific practice, as any other skilled activity, draws unselfconsciously upon the avaible. Thus even science, however detached and theoretical it may be, takes place against a background of involved activityin. (...) These relationships, and the sensibilities built up in the course of their unfolding, underwrite our capacities of judgement and skills of discrimination, and scientists - who are human too - depend on this capacities and skills as much as do the rest of us. That is why the sovereign perspective of abstract reason, upon which Western science lays its claim to authority, is practically unattaible: an intelligence that was completely detached from the conditions of life in the world could not think the thoughts it does".
T. Ingold - The Perception of the Environment: essays in livelihood, dwelling and skill
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Bringing Things To Life - Ingold
"Bringing things to life, then, is a matter not of adding to them a sprinkling of agency but of restoring them to the generative fluxes of the world of materials in which they came into being and continue to subsist. This view, that things are in life...
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The Crisis Of Science - Edmund Husserl
"It was not always the case that science understood its demand for rigorously grounded truth in the sense of the sort of objectivity which dominantes our positive sciences in respect to method and which, having its effect far beyond the sciences themselves,...
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Being-in-the-world - Heidegger
?Our method has already been assigned. The theme of our analytic is to be Being-in-the-world, and accordingly the very world itself; and these are to be considered within the horizon of average everydayness ? the kind of Being which is closest to Dasein....
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"science Never Proves Anything" - G. Bateson
"Science sometimes improves hypotheses and sometimes disproves them. But proof would be another matter and perhaps never occurs except in the realms of totally abstract tautology. We can sometimes say that if such and such abstract suppositions or...
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Bateson - "body-in-the-environment"
"We commonly think of the external 'physical world' as somehow separate from an internal 'mental world'. I believe that this division is based on the contrast in coding and transmission inside and outside the body. (...)In considering...
Antropologia