This book examines the human ability to participate in moments of joint feeling. It presents an answer to the question concerning the nature of our faculty to share in what might be called episodes of collective affective intentionality. The proposal develops the claim that our capacity to participate in such episodes is grounded in an ability central to our human condition: our capacity to care with one another about certain things.
The author provides a phenomenologically adequate account of collective affective intentionality that takes seriously the idea that feelings are at the...
This book examines the human ability to participate in moments of joint feeling. It presents an answer to the question concerning the nature of our...