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Being Human
Philosophical Anthropology through Phenomenology
Imprint: Catholic University of America Press
Being Human is the fruit of many years teaching Philosophical Anthropology, conducting Phenomenological Workshops, and reading classic texts in the light of a reflective awareness of the field of experience. Being Human is intended to look to what is typically assumed but not examined in much of current philosophical literature.
Today what typically appear as philosophical are textual studies that draw upon wide-ranging scholarship to learn how past thinkers used to think; or works that tend either to be "high-flying," operating at levels of abstraction far removed from experience and written in arcane style, and thus, for both reasons, difficult to assess (much of Continental thought); or minutely focused upon particular claims and the arguments that can be advanced for and against them (Analytical thought); or deconstructing texts to show how they do not fully work (the followers of Jacques Derrida). Scholarly study, abstract constructions, refined arguments, and deconstructive strategies are each important in their own way; but all take place within the structure of the field of experience which is typically assumed without paying explicit attention to it. Especially in philosophy of mind, the overall field of experience has too often been ignored, usually in favor of some conjecture as to how our ordinary categories would have to be changed when neuro-physiology will be far enough advanced to explain all our behavior.
Robert E. Wood claims that it is best to understand what it is that is supposed to be explained before conjecturing about possible explanations. But when you do that, you will have to come to terms with what it means to seek explanation, what a Who is that seeks it, and why it is sought.
Robert E. Wood is professor of philosophy at The University of Dallas and the author of The Beautiful and the Good: Studies in the History of Thought and Being and the Cosmos: From Seeing to Indwelling (both CUA Press).
"One of the best philosophical books written in the last decades. It is a privilege to read it! Offers a vigorous integration of the heart in the understanding of being human."
~Mirela Oliva, University of St. Thomas, Houston, TX
"Robert Wood has been an important voice within Catholic philosophy for the last half century. In Being Human we have his most mature thought on issues of philosophical anthropology. Particularly noteworthy is the way in which he practices the phenomenological ‘return to the things themselves.’ His considerable knowledge of the history of philosophy does not get in the way of primordial human experiences, but rather attunes us to them."
~John F. Crosby, author of The Personalism of John Henry Newman
"To read this book is to have the pleasure of receiving the fruits of a lifetime’s worth of philosophical thinking and achieved wisdom. Robert Wood’s book Being Human is genuinely philosophical, in the richest sense of that word. It is not merely a profound meditation on human persons’ relations to the Whole of Being, but an invigorating summons to readers to engage in such mediation themselves. Drawing upon phenomenology, traditional metaphysics, and careful attention to the concrete history that is sedimented in things, especially in the artifacts and technologies that shape our lives, Wood aims to clarify the very notion of Being through consideration of ordinary and concrete objects and their history."
~Mark K. Spencer, author of The Irreducibility of the Human Person: A Catholic Synthesis