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The Creative Mind

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The Creative Mind

The final published book by Nobel Prize-winning author and philosopher Henri Bergson (1859–1941), La pensée et le mouvant (translated here as The Creative Mind), is a masterly autobiography of his philosophical method. Through essays and lectures written between 1903 and 1923, Bergson retraces how and why he became a philosopher, and crafts a fascinating critique of philosophy itself. Until it leaves its false paths, he demonstrates, philosophy will remain only a wordy dialectic that surmounts false problems.
With masterful skill and intensity, Bergson shows that metaphysics and science must be rooted in experience for philosophy to become a genuine search for truth. And in the quest for unanswered questions, the spiritual dimension of human life and the importance of intuition must be emphasized. A source of inspiration for physicists as well as philosophers, Bergson's introduction to metaphysics reveals a philosophy that is always on the move, blending man's spiritual drive with his mastery of the material world.

Reprint of the Philosophical Library, New York, 1946 edition.
metaphysics;dialectic;intuition;rational mind;reason;affect;material world;critique of philosophy;science;interdisciplinary;spirituality;philosophy;autobiography;essays;letters;memoir;nonfiction;nobel prize;french philosophy;modern philosophy;external reality;senses;sensory perception;time;cognition;neurology;brain;neuroscience;claude bernard;william james;pragmatism;ravaisson;truth;judgment;retrograde;retrospective;meaning making; Bergson; philosophy; vitalism; western philosophy
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The final published book by Nobel Prize-winning author and philosopher Henri Bergson (1859–1941), La pensée et le mouvant (translated here as The Creative Mind), is a masterly autobiography of his philosophical method. Through essays and lectures written between 1903 and 1923, Bergson retraces how and why he became a philosopher, and crafts a fascinating critique of philosophy itself. Until it leaves its false paths, he demonstrates, philosophy will remain only a wordy dialectic that surmounts false problems.
With masterful skill and intensity, Bergson shows that metaphysics and science must be rooted in experience for philosophy to become a genuine search for truth. And in the quest for unanswered questions, the spiritual dimension of human life and the importance of intuition must be emphasized. A source of inspiration for physicists as well as philosophers, Bergson's introduction to metaphysics reveals a philosophy that is always on the move, blending man's spiritual drive with his mastery of the material world.

Reprint of the Philosophical Library, New York, 1946 edition.
metaphysics;dialectic;intuition;rational mind;reason;affect;material world;critique of philosophy;science;interdisciplinary;spirituality;philosophy;autobiography;essays;letters;memoir;nonfiction;nobel prize;french philosophy;modern philosophy;external reality;senses;sensory perception;time;cognition;neurology;brain;neuroscience;claude bernard;william james;pragmatism;ravaisson;truth;judgment;retrograde;retrospective;meaning making; Bergson; philosophy; vitalism; western philosophy
The Creative Mind | Dover Publications