A Touch of Doubt: On Haptic Scepticism (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #9)
Description
What can we know about ourselves and the world through the sense of touch and what are the epistemic limits of touch? Scepticism claims that there is always something that slips through the epistemologist's grasp. A Touch of Doubt explores the significance of touch for the history of philosophical scepticism as well as for scepticism as an embodied form of subversive political, religious, and artistic practice.
Drawing on the tradition of scepticism within nineteenth- and twentieth-century continental philosophy and psychoanalysis, this volume discusses how the sense of touch uncovers contradictions within our knowledge of ourselves and the world. It questions 1) what we can know through touch, 2) what we can know about touch itself, and 3) how our experience of touching the other and ourselves throws us into a state of doubt.
This volume is intended for students and scholars who wish to reconsider the experience of touching in intersections of philosophy, religion, art, and social and political practice.
Other Books in Series
Alienated Wisdom: Enquiry Into Jewish Philosophy and Scepticism (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #3)
Sceptical Paths: Enquiry and Doubt from Antiquity to the Present (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #6)
Alienated Wisdom: Enquiry Into Jewish Philosophy and Scepticism (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #3)
Judah Halevi's Fideistic Scepticism in the Kuzari (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #11)
Expressions of Sceptical Topoi in (Late) Antique Judaism (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #12)
Discourse on the State of the Jews: Bilingual Edition (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #7)
Isaac Orobio: The Jewish Argument with Dogma and Doubt (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #2)
Scepticism and Anti-Scepticism in Medieval Jewish Philosophy and Thought (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #5)
Socrates, or on Human Knowledge: Bilingual Edition (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #8)
Converts of Conviction: Faith and Scepticism in Nineteenth Century European Jewish Society (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #1)
Bruce Nauman: Performative Scepticism and the Aporia of Sense (Studies and Texts in Scepticism #10)
