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Time and Narrative: Part IV: Narrated time. Introduction. Section 1: The aporetics of temporality. 1. The time of the soul and the time of the world: the dispute between Augustine and Aristotle. 2. Intuitive time or invisible time? Husserl confronts Kant. 3. Temporality. historicality, within-time-ness: Heidegger and the "ordinary" concept of time. Section 2: Poetics of narrative: history, fiction, time. 4. Between lived time and universal time: historical time. 5. Fiction and its imaginative variations on time. 6. The reality of the past. 7. The world of the text and the world of the reader. 8. The interweaving of history and fiction. 9. Should we renounce Hegel? 10. Towards a hermeneutics of historical consciousness. Conclusions. Notes. Bibliography. Index

by Paul Ricœur

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In the first two volumes of this work, Paul Ricoeur examined the relations between time and narrative in historical writing, fiction and theories of literature. This final volume, a comprehensive reexamination and synthesis of the ideas developed in volumes 1 and 2, stands as Ricoeur's most complete and satisfying presentation of his own philosophy.

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