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sens of the world, the meaning of history, the power of art, and ultimately of that strange intertwining of human being within time, ambiguity, materiality and language. For Merleau-Ponty, depth became the primary dimension of experience to be interrogated, "the dimension of dimensions" (EM, p. 185).1 The importance of depth to understanding Merleau-Ponty's use of the term "flesh" and as central to the import of both The Visible and the Invisible and "Eye and Mind" has yet to be fathomed. Without radicalizing the notion of depth as thoroughly as Merleau-Ponty, it is not possible to subvert the subjectivistic approach to human being, the mentalistic approach to subjectivity qua consciousness, or the dualistic, reifying, conceptions of the natural, historical, cultural world." />
pp. 227-250
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