Home
Reflections on metaReality: Transcendence, Emancipation and Everyday Life
Barnes and Noble
Reflections on metaReality: Transcendence, Emancipation and Everyday Life
Current price: $190.00


Barnes and Noble
Reflections on metaReality: Transcendence, Emancipation and Everyday Life
Current price: $190.00
Size: Hardcover
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Reflections on meta-Reality
is now widely regarded as a landmark in contemporary philosophy. It initiates the philosophy of meta-Reality, the third main phase of Roy Bhaskar’s philosophical thoughts, after original or basic critical realism and dialectical critical realism. Originally published in 2002 and based on talks given in India, Europe and America, Roy Bhaskar presents his new philosophy of meta-Reality as a radical extension, systematic development and proleptic completion of critical realism.
This brilliant series of studies contains seminal and far-reaching discussions of critical realism and the nature of being; an incisive and limpid account of modernity, modernism and post-modernism; a sublime discourse on the nature of the self and compelling considerations on the relationship between social science and self-realization. Together, they demonstrate the ubiquity of transcendental phenomena in everyday life and the orientation of enlightenment towards collective human emancipation and universal self-realization.
A new introduction to this edition by Mervyn Hartwig, founding editor of
The Journal of Critical Realism
and editor of
A Dictionary of Critical Realism
(Routledge, 2007), describes the context, significance and impact of
, and supplies an expert guide to its content. This book is essential reading for students and practitioners in both philosophy and the human sciences.
is now widely regarded as a landmark in contemporary philosophy. It initiates the philosophy of meta-Reality, the third main phase of Roy Bhaskar’s philosophical thoughts, after original or basic critical realism and dialectical critical realism. Originally published in 2002 and based on talks given in India, Europe and America, Roy Bhaskar presents his new philosophy of meta-Reality as a radical extension, systematic development and proleptic completion of critical realism.
This brilliant series of studies contains seminal and far-reaching discussions of critical realism and the nature of being; an incisive and limpid account of modernity, modernism and post-modernism; a sublime discourse on the nature of the self and compelling considerations on the relationship between social science and self-realization. Together, they demonstrate the ubiquity of transcendental phenomena in everyday life and the orientation of enlightenment towards collective human emancipation and universal self-realization.
A new introduction to this edition by Mervyn Hartwig, founding editor of
The Journal of Critical Realism
and editor of
A Dictionary of Critical Realism
(Routledge, 2007), describes the context, significance and impact of
, and supplies an expert guide to its content. This book is essential reading for students and practitioners in both philosophy and the human sciences.