Phenomenology: Critical Concepts in Philosophy, Volume 3Dermot Moran, Lester E. Embree This set reprints the essential scholarship published in the field. It includes a general introduction by the editors, as well as individual volume introductions, exploring and contextualising the main themes of the comprehensively covered tradition. This is a key point of reference for anyone researching the phenomenological tradition. |
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Contents
Introduction to Volume III | 1 |
Philosophy of science | 3 |
The phenomenology of signals and significations | 5 |
To be a Fregean or to be a Husserlian that is the question for Platonists | 21 |
Scientific discovery logical psychological or hermeneutical? | 43 |
Some contributions of existential phenomenology to the philosophy of natural science | 59 |
Phenomenological psychology | 82 |
The traumatized subject | 99 |
Phenomenological aesthetics an attempt at defining its range | 185 |
Philosophy and art | 204 |
The aesthetic dialogue of Sartre and MerleauPonty | 220 |
Literary criticism and phenomenology | 241 |
53 Heidegger on art | 253 |
Ethics | 271 |
The person in ethical contexts | 273 |
Personal freedom and others | 297 |
Positivistic philosophy and the actual approach of interpretative social science an ineditum of Alfred Schutz from spring 1953 | 119 |
Phenomenology and historical knowledge | 146 |
The new hermeneutics other trends and the human sciences from the standpoint of transcendental phenomenology | 159 |
Art | 183 |
What is moral action? | 318 |
Edmund Husserl from reason to love | 332 |
Ethics as first philosophy | 353 |
Common terms and phrases
abstract acts aesthetic Alfred Schutz analysis artist attitude axiology become behavior called categorial categorical imperative character concept concrete consciousness constituted context critic critique cultural Descartes discovery Edmund Husserl empirical ence enjoyment enology epistemology essence ethics event existence experience expression fact formal freedom Frege Fregean Heidegger Heidegger's hermeneutics human sciences Husserl Ibid ideal individual intentional interpretation Kant knowledge laws Levinas lifeworld living logic Martin Heidegger mathematical Maurice Merleau-Ponty meaning Merleau-Ponty method narrative natural sciences object observer ontological painter painting patent perceived perception person philosophy philosophy of science polysemy possible present presuppositions principle problem propositions psychic psychology pure question reality reference reflection relation Roman Ingarden Sartre scientific sense sense and reference signal signification situation social sciences speak structure temporal theoretical theory things thinking thought tion transcendental phenomenology trauma truth understanding unity University values Walter Biemel words
References to this book
Phobic Geographies: The Phenomenology and Spatiality of Identity Joyce Davidson No preview available - 2003 |