Preface to the Second Edition Introduction The Problematic Place of Imagination Part One Preliminary Portrait 1. Examples and First Approximations 2. Imagining as Intentional Part Two Detailed Descriptions 3. Spontaneity and Controlledness 4. Self-Containedness and Self Evidence 5. Indeterminacy and Pure Possibility Part Three Phenomenological Comparisons 6. Imagining and Perceiving: Continuities 7. Imagining and Perceiving: Discontinuities Part Four The Autonomy of Imagining 8. The Nature of Imaginative Autonomy 9. The Significance of Imaginative Autonomy
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Description
"Casey's work is doubly valuable--for its major substantive contribution to our understanding of a significant mental activity, as well as for its exemplary presentation of the method of phenomenological analysis." --Contemporary Psychology "... an important addition to phenomenological philosophy and to the humanities generally." --Choice "This scrupulous, lucid study is destined to become a touchstone for all future writings on imagination." --Library Journal " ... deliberately and consistently phenomenological, oriented throughout to the basically intentional character of experience and disciplines by the requirement of proceeding by way of concrete description... an exceptionally well-written work." --International Philosophical Quarterly

