Introduction: Aims, Background, and Clarifications
Chapter One: Deep Perception in the Philosophical and Related Traditions
Chapter Two: Deep Perception: Beginnings
Chapter Three: The Legitimacy and the Intuitive Sense and Manageability of This Kind of SelfReferential Self-Contradiction
Chapter Four: Contemporary Western-Northern Philosophy and the Meaningful Identifiability of
Being as Such
Chapter Five: Contemporary Western-Northern Philosophy and the Possibility of the Direct
Perception of Being: Ontology, or Not
Chapter Six: The Sense or Intelligible Structure of Deep Perception
Chapter Seven: Some Characteristics of Deep Perception and Some Corresponding Aspects of Its
Working
Chapter Eight: The Nature and Method of Engaging in Deep Perception or Some Ways of Being
Ourselves
Chapter Nine: Different Kinds of Deep Perception and Varieties of Its Form of Expression or
Vehicle
Chapter Ten: Deep Perception as Already Responsibility
Chapter Eleven: Deep Action
Conclusion: An Historical Note, and Deep Perception and Plain Truth
References
About the Author