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Preface | ||
Acknowledgements | ||
Editor's Introduction | 1 | |
Pt. I | Franz von Brentano: Intentionality and the Project of Descriptive Psychology | 27 |
1 | Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint: Foreword to the 1874 Edition | 32 |
2 | The Distinction between Mental and Physical Phenomena | 35 |
3 | Descriptive Psychology or Descriptive Phenomenology: From the Lectures of 1888-1889 | 51 |
4 | Letter to Anton Marty | 55 |
Pt. II | Edmund Husserl: Founder of Phenomenology | 57 |
1 | Introduction to the Logical Investigations | 65 |
2 | Consciousness as Intentional Experience | 78 |
3 | The Phenomenology of Internal Time Consciousness | 109 |
4 | Pure Phenomenology, its Method, and its Field of Investigation | 124 |
5 | Noesis and Noema | 134 |
6 | The Way into Phenomenological Transcendental Philosophy by Inquiring back from the Pregiven Life-World | 151 |
Pt. III | Adolf Reinach: The Phenomenology of Social Acts | 175 |
1 | Concerning Phenomenology | 180 |
Pt. IV | Max Scheler: Phenomenology of the Person | 197 |
1 | The Being of the Person | 203 |
Pt. V | Edith Stein: Phenomenology and the Interpersonal | 227 |
1 | On the Problem of Empathy | 231 |
Pt. VI | Martin Heidegger: Hermeneutical Phenomenology and Fundamental Ontology | 243 |
1 | My Way to Phenomenology | 251 |
2 | The Fundamental Discoveries of Phenomenology, its Principle, and the Clarification of its Name | 257 |
3 | The Phenomenological Method of Investigation | 278 |
4 | The Worldhood of the World | 288 |
Pt. VII | Hans-Georg Gadamer: Phenomenology, Hermeneutics and Tradition | 309 |
1 | Elements of a Theory of Hermeneutic Experience | 314 |
Pt. VIII | Hannah Arendt: Phenomenology of the Public World | 339 |
1 | What is Existenz Philosophy? | 345 |
2 | Labor, Work, Action | 362 |
Pt. IX | Jean-Paul Sartre: Transcendence and Freedom | 375 |
1 | Intentionality: A Fundamental Idea of Husserl's Phenomenology | 382 |
2 | The Transcendence of the Ego | 385 |
3 | Bad Faith | 408 |
Pt. X | Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Embodied Perception | 421 |
1 | The Body as Object and Mechanistic Physiology | 427 |
2 | The Primacy of Perception and its Philosophical Consequences | 436 |
Pt. XI | Simone de Beauvoir: Phenomenology and Feminism | 461 |
1 | Destiny | 467 |
2 | Woman's Situation and Character | 486 |
Pt. XII | Emmanuel Levinas: The Primacy of the Other | 509 |
1 | Ethics and the Face | 515 |
2 | Beyond Intentionality | 529 |
Pt. XIII | Jacques Derrida: Phenomenology and Deconstruction | 541 |
1 | Signs and the Blink of an Eye | 547 |
2 | Differance | 555 |
Pt. XIV | Paul Ricoeur: Phenomenology as Interpretation | 573 |
1 | Phenomenology and Hermeneutics | 579 |
Name Index | 601 | |
Subject Index | 604 |
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Add Phenomenology Reader, The Phenomenology Reader is the first comprehensive anthology of seminal writings in phenomenology. Carefully selected readings chart phenomenology's most famous thinkers, such as Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre and Derrida, as well as less well known f, Phenomenology Reader to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Phenomenology Reader, The Phenomenology Reader is the first comprehensive anthology of seminal writings in phenomenology. Carefully selected readings chart phenomenology's most famous thinkers, such as Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre and Derrida, as well as less well known f, Phenomenology Reader to your collection on WonderClub |