ABSTRACT

First published in 1966, The Discipline of the Cave is the first series of a course of Gifford lectures on philosophical issues.. J N Findlay’s lectures use the image of the Cave to show how familiarity is full of restrictions, and involves puzzles and discrepancies unable to be resolved or removed. Such philosophical perplexities may be a result of the misunderstanding and abuse of ordinary ways of thinking and speaking. They may also be a way of ‘drawing us towards being’, providing proof of the absurdity of ordinary thought, speech and experience unless modified and added to in ways which may point beyond it. What may be called a mystical and otherworldly element may need to be introduced into or rendered explicit in all our experience in order to give a viable sense to the most commonplace human utterances and activities.

chapter Lecture I|22 pages

The Furnishings Of The Cave

chapter Lecture II|21 pages

The Methods of Cave-Exploration: I. Phenomenological

chapter Lecture III|20 pages

The Methods of Cave-Exploration: II. Dialectical

chapter Lecture IV|21 pages

The Cave Foreground: The Resting Face of Bodies

chapter Lecture V|20 pages

The Cave Foreground: The Moving Face of Bodies

chapter Lecture VI|20 pages

The Dissolution of Bodies

chapter Lecture VII|21 pages

Further Antinomies of Bodies

chapter Lecture VIII|19 pages

The Realm of Minds

chapter Lecture IX|20 pages

The Realm of Minds Continued

chapter Lecture X|20 pages

The Dissolution of the Realm of Minds