Nenon, Thomas.
Advancing Phenomenology Essays in Honor of Lester Embree / [electronic resource] : edited by Thomas Nenon, Philip Blosser. - XVIII, 518 p. online resource. - Contributions To Phenomenology, 62 0923-9545 ; . - Contributions To Phenomenology, 62 .
The Backdrop to Husserl's Phenomenology -- Naturalism, Historism, and Phenomenology -- Husserl's Phenomenological Philosophy -- How Is Phenomenology Motivated? -- Working Notions: A Meditation on Husserlian Phenomenological Practice -- Percept, Concept, and the Stratification of Ideality -- Focusing and Phenomenology -- Quo Vadis, Phenomenology? -- Toward a Husserlian Conception of Epistemology -- Perception as a Source of Justification of Belief -- The Worldhood of the World and the Worldly Character of Objects in Husserl -- Thinking of Difference and Otherness from a Husserlian Perspective -- Husserl and His Philosophical Successors -- Husserl and Merleau-Ponty on Embodied Experience -- Making the Case for Gestalt Organization: Edmund Husserl and Aron Gurwitsch on the Problem of Independent Parts -- Phenomenology of Surprise -- The Crisis of Modern Society and Critical Rationality -- Can a Schelerian Ethic Be Grounded in the Heart without Losing Its Head? -- Phenomenology Beyond Philosophy -- A Phenomenological Reflection Conducted Through Narrative: An Essay in Honor of Lester Embree -- The Participating Professional -- Phenomenological Overcoming of Western Prejudices against Nonhuman Animals -- Ecophenomenology and the Resistance of Nature -- Reflections on the Ecological Crisis and the Meaning of Nature -- Modern Technology and the Flight from Architecture -- Reflections on Metaarchaeology -- Objective Meaning and Subjective Meaning: A Clarification of Schutz’s Point of View -- Methodology of the Social Sciences Is Where the Social Scientists, Philosophers and the Persons on the Street Should Meet -- Phenomenological Philosophy and Analytic Philosophy -- Phenomenological Wissenschaftslehre and John McDowell’s Quietism -- Essays and Documents on Lester Embree's Contributions to Phenomenology -- Advancing Phenomenology as a Practical Endeavor -- A Letter of Dorion Cairns -- Curriculum Vitae.
The title Advancing Phenomenology is purposely ambiguous. On the one hand, these essays document the progress that phenomenology as an ongoing and vibrant movement has made in the period of about a century since its inception. They illustrate the advance of phenomenology both in terms of the range of topics represented in this volume and in terms of the disciplinary and geographical diversity of the scholars who have contributed to it. The topics range from scholarly appropriations of past achievements in phenomenology, to concrete phenomenological investigations into ethics and environmental philosophy, as well as phenomenological reflections on the foundations of disciplines outside philosophy such as psychology, history, the social sciences, and archeology. The interdisciplinary aspect is guaranteed by contributors coming both from philosophy departments and from a number disciplines outside of philosophy such as sociology, psychology, and archeology; and they come from all around the world – from North America, from Western and Eastern Europe, from Latin America, and from several different countries in Asia. Together, these essays testify to the breadth and geographical reach of phenomenology at the beginning of the 20th Century. The papers in this volume provide good evidence of the seriousness and fruitfulness of current research in phenomenology today.
9789048192861
10.1007/978-90-481-9286-1 doi
Philosophy (General).
Phenomenology.
Social sciences--Philosophy.
Philosophy.
Phenomenology.
History of Philosophy.
Philosophy of the Social Sciences.
B829.5.A-829.5.Z
142.7
Advancing Phenomenology Essays in Honor of Lester Embree / [electronic resource] : edited by Thomas Nenon, Philip Blosser. - XVIII, 518 p. online resource. - Contributions To Phenomenology, 62 0923-9545 ; . - Contributions To Phenomenology, 62 .
The Backdrop to Husserl's Phenomenology -- Naturalism, Historism, and Phenomenology -- Husserl's Phenomenological Philosophy -- How Is Phenomenology Motivated? -- Working Notions: A Meditation on Husserlian Phenomenological Practice -- Percept, Concept, and the Stratification of Ideality -- Focusing and Phenomenology -- Quo Vadis, Phenomenology? -- Toward a Husserlian Conception of Epistemology -- Perception as a Source of Justification of Belief -- The Worldhood of the World and the Worldly Character of Objects in Husserl -- Thinking of Difference and Otherness from a Husserlian Perspective -- Husserl and His Philosophical Successors -- Husserl and Merleau-Ponty on Embodied Experience -- Making the Case for Gestalt Organization: Edmund Husserl and Aron Gurwitsch on the Problem of Independent Parts -- Phenomenology of Surprise -- The Crisis of Modern Society and Critical Rationality -- Can a Schelerian Ethic Be Grounded in the Heart without Losing Its Head? -- Phenomenology Beyond Philosophy -- A Phenomenological Reflection Conducted Through Narrative: An Essay in Honor of Lester Embree -- The Participating Professional -- Phenomenological Overcoming of Western Prejudices against Nonhuman Animals -- Ecophenomenology and the Resistance of Nature -- Reflections on the Ecological Crisis and the Meaning of Nature -- Modern Technology and the Flight from Architecture -- Reflections on Metaarchaeology -- Objective Meaning and Subjective Meaning: A Clarification of Schutz’s Point of View -- Methodology of the Social Sciences Is Where the Social Scientists, Philosophers and the Persons on the Street Should Meet -- Phenomenological Philosophy and Analytic Philosophy -- Phenomenological Wissenschaftslehre and John McDowell’s Quietism -- Essays and Documents on Lester Embree's Contributions to Phenomenology -- Advancing Phenomenology as a Practical Endeavor -- A Letter of Dorion Cairns -- Curriculum Vitae.
The title Advancing Phenomenology is purposely ambiguous. On the one hand, these essays document the progress that phenomenology as an ongoing and vibrant movement has made in the period of about a century since its inception. They illustrate the advance of phenomenology both in terms of the range of topics represented in this volume and in terms of the disciplinary and geographical diversity of the scholars who have contributed to it. The topics range from scholarly appropriations of past achievements in phenomenology, to concrete phenomenological investigations into ethics and environmental philosophy, as well as phenomenological reflections on the foundations of disciplines outside philosophy such as psychology, history, the social sciences, and archeology. The interdisciplinary aspect is guaranteed by contributors coming both from philosophy departments and from a number disciplines outside of philosophy such as sociology, psychology, and archeology; and they come from all around the world – from North America, from Western and Eastern Europe, from Latin America, and from several different countries in Asia. Together, these essays testify to the breadth and geographical reach of phenomenology at the beginning of the 20th Century. The papers in this volume provide good evidence of the seriousness and fruitfulness of current research in phenomenology today.
9789048192861
10.1007/978-90-481-9286-1 doi
Philosophy (General).
Phenomenology.
Social sciences--Philosophy.
Philosophy.
Phenomenology.
History of Philosophy.
Philosophy of the Social Sciences.
B829.5.A-829.5.Z
142.7