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Reviews for The Philosophy of Edmund Husserl

 The Philosophy of Edmund Husserl magazine reviews

The average rating for The Philosophy of Edmund Husserl based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-01-15 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars Carolyn Alder
I might be a little unfair with the "star rating", but I felt that to combine Hegel's chapters on Reason and Spirit in a single sweeping chapter was a bit much… they *at least* require a chapter each! Nevertheless, Verene's book is definitely does a great job of summing up the thrust of 'The Phenomenology'. In fact, I can understand the sort of rushed treatment of Reason and Spirit since Verene argues that the structure of the entire book is already apparent in the sections on Consciousness and Self-Consciousness as well as the understanding, emphasizing for "twoness" as the major feature of Hegel's philosophy. This is, of course, true. The writing is definitely interesting enough to seek more by Verene, most of all 'Hegel's Recollection.'
Review # 2 was written on 2010-07-28 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars Kara Gibson
Horror movies never frightened me in the same way certain works of literature and film did. Reading through Zarathustra as a teenager was a singularly powerful experience; the work defies categorization or genre, time or place. I was warned that Nietzsche was dangerous for young readers (like Machiavelli) because he went insane. This I HAD to read. It was my first encounter with existential thought, a stinging critique of the very nature of values and belief. The events in the book are more like Biblical parables than a plot unfolding, except that the lesson is not, "Thou Shalt" but "Why should I?" I wish I could read German well enough to understand the nuances of Nietzsche's original narrative. Full of surreal visions, Zarathustra is a challenge to interpret but at the same time, lacks the semantics of conventional philosophy that makes the field inaccessible for many young students. So many things are explored, celebrated or indicted with ambitious and sharp leaps of metaphors: Moral relativism, comparative theology and eternal recurrence, nothing short of the love of life, the will to life. Many fascinating discussions have explored what could have influenced Nietzsche: the social milieu of late 19th century Europe, the contradictions of Enlightenment thought, etc. Thus Spoke Zarathustra will forever retain its mystery and is a monument to Nietzsche's eccentricity.


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