#giveness #plants #mint #green #photography #instaphoto #photographer #photoshoot #photooftheday #sense https://www.instagram.com/p/BooOGqIh92u/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1ocpdc88x13p7
seen from United States
seen from India
seen from T1

seen from Argentina

seen from New Zealand
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from Mexico

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from Singapore

seen from Russia

seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Netherlands
seen from Singapore
seen from China
#giveness #plants #mint #green #photography #instaphoto #photographer #photoshoot #photooftheday #sense https://www.instagram.com/p/BooOGqIh92u/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1ocpdc88x13p7
What can a phenomenologist see when they look at the world?
What can a phenomenologist see when they look at the world?
Husserl talks about gegebenheit when describing the process of perceiving something in the world. In translation to English we usually use the word ‘givenness’. Givenness illustrates two aspects of the world. It is a quality of that which is given, or perceived, as well as the act of it being giving.
Givenness has a generous, immediate and egalitarian quality. It is a process of offering rather…
View On WordPress
"فيكون كالشجرة" #be #tree #ink #drawings #pen #drawing #pendrawing #color #art #fast #sketch #free #hand #imagine #imagination #endless #giveness
I just want a boy to love me,love every part of me.Make love to me.I am a girl with issues i know it.I don't want him to solve my problems.I just need someone to help me through this with his little love :)
There are some ideas, for example that exceed the capacity for economic thinking, and hence that exceed the human capacity to achieve their reality. Such an idea would be that of a gift. Economically speaking, the gift does not work. It is resistant to calculation, unable to be fully thought, impossible, a black hole. In Derrida’s words, the gift is structured as an aporia. An aporia is, in the Aristotelean sense, a problem. Derrida suggests it is ‘the difficult or the impracticable, here the impossible, passage, the refused, denied, or prohibited passage, indeed the nonpassage, which can in fact be something else, the event of a coming or of a future advent, which no longer has the form of the movement that consists in passing, traversing or transiting.’ In other words, an aporia is a problem that resists being solved, because it defies any usual frame of reference. An aporia is a problem that exceeds our capacity even to hold on to it as a problem. It is resolved, not by reasoning or by proof, but only by decision.
Robyn Horner, Rethinking God as Gift: Marion, Derrida, and the Limits of Phenomenology, p. 6-7
Then why do I choose to love now? Reason is rather simple. I begin to find that people around me need to be loved and nobody should be flouted. Try my best, to give them love and caring.
Qinghao