“Since
the end of the last century,” Walter Benjamin wrote, “philosophy
has made a series of attempts to lay hold of the ‘true’
experience as opposed to the kind that manifests itself in the standardized,
denatured life of the civilized masses. It is customary to classify
these efforts under the heading of a philosophy of life. Towering
above this literature is Henri Bergson’s early monumental
work Matter and Memory.”
Along with Husserl’s Ideas and Heidegger’s
Being and Time, Bergson’s work represents one of
the great twentieth-century investigations into perception and memory,
movement and time, matter and mind. Arguably Bergson’s most
significant book, Matter and Memory is essential to an
understanding of his philosophy and its legacy.
This new edition includes an annotated bibliography prepared especially
for it by Bruno Paradis.
“It would greatly distort Bergson to minimize the amazing
description of perceived being given in Matter and Memory. Never before had anyone thus described the brute being of the perceived
world. In unveiling it along with nascent duration, Bergson rediscovers
in the heart of man a pre-Socratic and ‘prehuman’ sense
of the world.”
— Maurice Merleau-Ponty See also:
Bergsonism
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