Thursday, October 8, 2015

Group Blog Post: Julia, Derrick, and Samantha

Julia, Derrick, and Samantha
Group Blog Post

  1. Intention of a Real Object
  1. Intentional Object: The emotional state of anger.
  2. Intentional Content
    1. Intentional Quality: An emotional state that we find generally unpleasant, but it is experienced by everyone. We can relate to anger by thinking about what it is like, recalling how and why we become angry, perceiving anger in someone else.
    2. Intentional Matter: Anger is an unpleasant emotional response to some wrong.
  3. Immanent Content: The experience of actually being angry.
  4. Givenness
    1. Signitive: talking to someone about anger
    2. Imaginative: remembering a time when you were angry
    3. Intuitive: Actually being angry.
  1. Intention of an Ideal Object
  1. Intentional Object: Justice
  2. Intentional Content
    1. Intentional Quality: We can imagine what a just act would be, recall a time when we experienced justice, or we can experience/perceive justice personally.
    2. Intentional Matter: a virtue, characterized by fairness, morality ,equality, etc.
  3. Immanent Content:When we experience justice as done unto us, or by us. It is unrecollective and unthemized, because we are not remembering a past experience of justice nor are we thinking about what Justice is as a concept.
  4. Givenness:
    1. Signitive: Talking about justice, thinking about a hypothetically just situation
    2. Imaginative: Recollection of a just experience, seeing an image or picture of something representing “justice”.
    3. Intuitive: Experiencing justice firsthand, seeing and perceiving justice as it occurs before you.
  1. Discovery or Creation of an Ideal or Real Object
  1. Intentional Object: Inventing something
  2. Intentional Content
    1. Intentional Quality: The intentional quality can change in how we relate to it; we can think about how we want to invent something, we can look for a way to invent something, and we can then experience the physical act of creating the invention.
    2. Intentional Matter: The parts needed to invent and create something that can achieve the “goal function”, e.g., the power source for an electronic invention or the structural pieces to make something stand upright, etc.
  3. Immanent Content: Inventing the something, i.e., coming up with the idea and/or plan that will allow something to be invented.
    1. in signitive givenness the immanent content of "inventing something" is merely a hypothetical, which is "mostly empty". Imaginative givenness would be a picture of someone inventing something with is moderately fulfilling, and then intuitive would be the act of inventing something which is the best, most fulfilling type.
  4. Givenness:
    1. Signitive: Talking about how you’d like to invent something, or how something should be invented to fix/solve ____.
    2. Imaginative: Remembering something that you invented in the past, imagining yourself or someone else inventing something
    3. Intuitive: Actually inventing the device.

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