Publicação
Refugiados na vida-grafia: uma aproximação a partir de Michel Henry
| Resumo: | The relationship with people dispossessed of territory on the borders within which they used to conceiving life requires an effort to find common ground for their acceptance. Phenomenological concepts of duplicity of appearance and transcendental birth contribute to broaden the understanding of human life beyond the outer landmarks that affixed them on territories and cultures, because they conceive them asdonated in life and for life. Without this perspective founded on duplicity of appearance, the migrants suffer a distancing that increases the difficulty of understanding. As illustration we take the statements of Michel Henry about his own biography, in which he confronts the objective data with impressions that stem from the rationality of life itself. Thus we propose the need to juxtapose the exterior features of membership “in the world” with the inherent characteristics of being alive “in life.” Michel Henry’s interview is connected with his statements about the invisible and transcendental birth, especially from the phenomenology of Christianity. The simultaneous consideration of bio-graphy with what might be called life-graphy generates the essential knowledge for deep communication with the different. That’s knowledge (connaissance) generated from the common birth (co-naissance). |
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| Autores principais: | Wondracek, Karin Hellen Kepler |
| Ano: | 2016 |
| País: | Portugal |
| Tipo de documento: | artigo |
| Tipo de acesso: | unknown |
| Instituição associada: | Universidade Católica Portuguesa |
| Idioma: | português |
| Origem: | Humanística e Teologia |
| Resumo: | The relationship with people dispossessed of territory on the borders within which they used to conceiving life requires an effort to find common ground for their acceptance. Phenomenological concepts of duplicity of appearance and transcendental birth contribute to broaden the understanding of human life beyond the outer landmarks that affixed them on territories and cultures, because they conceive them asdonated in life and for life. Without this perspective founded on duplicity of appearance, the migrants suffer a distancing that increases the difficulty of understanding. As illustration we take the statements of Michel Henry about his own biography, in which he confronts the objective data with impressions that stem from the rationality of life itself. Thus we propose the need to juxtapose the exterior features of membership “in the world” with the inherent characteristics of being alive “in life.” Michel Henry’s interview is connected with his statements about the invisible and transcendental birth, especially from the phenomenology of Christianity. The simultaneous consideration of bio-graphy with what might be called life-graphy generates the essential knowledge for deep communication with the different. That’s knowledge (connaissance) generated from the common birth (co-naissance). |
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