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  1. The characteristics of involuntary and voluntary autobiographical memories in depressed and never depressed individuals. Lynn Ann Watson, Dorthe Berntsen, Willem Kuyken & Ed R. Watkins - 2012 - Consciousness and Cognition 21 (3):1382-1392. Autobiographical memory for stressful events: The role of autobiographical memory in posttraumatic stress ...

  2. www.jstor.org › stable › 40969925Review - JSTOR

    epoche: "pure description and pure understanding of the voluntary and the involuntary are constituted by bracketing the fault which profoundly alters man's intelligibility and by bracketing the Tran-

  3. Paul Ricoeur claims in Freedom and Nature that delimiting the domain of habit is deeply challenging, owing to the fact that we tend not to know exactly what it is that we are asking about.

  4. Freedom and Nature: The Voluntary and the Involuntary. Mary Warnock - 1967 - Philosophical Quarterly 17 (68):279.

  5. Freedom and Nature. : This volume, the first part of Paul Ricoeur's Philosophy of the Will, is an eidetics, carried out within carefully imposed phenomenological brackets. It seeks to deal with the essential structure of man's being in the world, and so it suspends the distorting dimensions of existence, the bondage of passion, and the vision ...

  6. Non-Voluntary and Involuntary Euthanasia in the Netherlands: Dutch Perspectives. Raphael Cohen-Almagor - 2002 - Croatian Journal of Philosophy 2 (5):161-179.

  7. Philosophical debates on habit often emphasize its ambivalent character: once habitualized, voluntary activity becomes natural. Consequently, the ambiguity of habit is the ambiguity of freedom and nature. This view was recently criticized by Claude Romano for its lack of conceptual clarity. Focusing on the phenomenology of habit as developed by Ricoeur and Merleau-Ponty, and in response to ...