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Acknowledgements X
Introduction: opening words 1
What is phenomenology? 5
Faces of phenomenology
Outlook
Inheriting philosophy 10
Modernism in philosophy 11
Theses
No 'theses in philosophy' 14
'Description, not explanation or analysis' 16
'Re-look at the world without blinkers' 17
No view 'from the sideways perspective' 17
'We must go back to the "things themselves" 20
Where's the beef? 20
Quietism 24
The emergence of phenomenology: Brentano and Husserl 29
The dream of phenomenology
The legacy of Brentano
The subjectivity of the mental 35
The intentionality doctrine 37
Husserl's analysis of signs
Indication and expression 40
The primacy of expression: Husserl 42
The primacy of indication: Heidegger and Derrida 45
Husserl's Cartesian Meditations
The Cartesian starting point 48
The opening of transcendental phenomenology 49
Husserl's master argument and the inward turn 54
Phenomenology as fundamental ontology: Martin Heidegger 59
The new beginning again
Fundamentalontology
The question of Being 60
The inquiry into the meaning of 'Being' 62
The essence and end of philosophy 66
The phenomenology of Dasein
The forgotten question 72
The analytic of Dasein 76
Being and the Nothing
Conceding nothing 82
Anxiety and the Nothing 87
Twilight of the idols 90
Existential phenomenology: Jean-Paul Sartre 92
The 'has been'
The assault on idealism
Realism and idealism 93
The Being of the subject 95
The Being of the object 96
Being and nothingness
Sartre's negatites 100
At home in the world 103
Moral phenomenology
Freedom 105
Our moral situation 108
Kierkegaardian exemplarism 111
Mundig man 116
Phenomenology of perception: Maurice Merleau-Ponty 119
Ever-renewed beginnings
A preface for phenomenology
What we have been waiting for 120
A new phenomenological reduction
The forswearing of science 124
The priority argument 126
The true cogito 129
The critique of objective thought 131
The body prior to science
Towards the incarnate subject 154
Language and gesture 136
A genius for ambiguity 141
Phenomenology and the Other: Emmanuel Levinas 145
Levinas arrives
The Levinasian thicket
Levinas' writing 150
The transcendence of totality 153
The unreasonable animal 155
The otherness of Others and of things 157
Levinas contra Heidegger and contra Husserl
Leaving Heidegger 160
Leaving Husserl 163
Leaving home 165
The rehabilitation of sensation
The Other as sensibly given 167
Sensible pleasure 168
Reading the Other 173
Interrupting phenomenology: Jacques Derrida 178
In the name of phenomenology
A preface to what remains to come
The truth of man 180
The exergue 186
The rehabilitation of writing
Situating the linguistic turn 190
Writing and iterability 197
Deconstructing humanism
The difference between humans and animals 202
Beyond the truth of man 207
Closing words 210
Notes 212
Bibliography 255
Index 261
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Add The Movement of Phenomenology, The attempt to pursue philosophy in the name of phenomenology is one of the most significant and important developments in twentieth century thought. In this bold and innovative book, Simon Glendinning introduces some of its major figures, and demonstrate, The Movement of Phenomenology to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add The Movement of Phenomenology, The attempt to pursue philosophy in the name of phenomenology is one of the most significant and important developments in twentieth century thought. In this bold and innovative book, Simon Glendinning introduces some of its major figures, and demonstrate, The Movement of Phenomenology to your collection on WonderClub |