In this paper, the author analyses a case of philosophical imagination as a variant of 'anthropological imagination'. This example is the growing radicalization of the conceptualization of the phenomenon of human body in the work of three phenomenologists - Husserl, Merlau-Ponty, and Levinas. This radicalization consisted in passing from the conceptualization of human body as an empirical phenomenon, through treating it as a phenomenon reduced to a certain structure, to treating human corporeality as a phantasm of the sharpest ethical duty.
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