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  • Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V  (8)
  • Philosophy of mind  (8)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789400707733
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (IX, 354p, digital)
    Series Statement: Analecta Husserliana, The Yearbook of Phenomenological Research 109
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Tymieniecka, Anna-Teresa, 1925 - 2014 Destiny, the inward quest, temporality and life
    RVK:
    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Aesthetics ; Metaphysics ; Philosophy of mind ; Humanities ; Philosophy ; Philosophy (General) ; Aesthetics ; Metaphysics ; Philosophy ; Philosophy of mind ; Humanities ; Aesthetics ; Humanities ; Metaphysics ; Philosophy (General) ; Philosophy of mind ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Konferenzschrift ; Philosophische Anthropologie ; Phänomenologie ; Literatur
    Abstract: There is no greater gift to man than to understand nothing of his fate , declares poet-philosopher Paul Valery. And yet the searching human being seeks ceaselessly to disentangle the networks of experiences, desires, inward promptings, personal ambitions, and elevated strivings which directed his/her life-course within changing circumstances in order to discover his sense of life. Literature seeks in numerous channels of insight the dominant threads of the sense of life , the inward quest , the frames of experience in reaching the inward sources of what we call 'destiny' inspired by experience and temporality which carry it on. This unusual collection reveals the deeper generative elements which form sense of life stretching between destiny and doom. They escape attention in their metamorphic transformations of the inexorable, irreversibility of time which undergoes different interpretations in the phases examining our life. Our key to life has to be ever discovered anew.
    Description / Table of Contents: Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; SECTION I The Sense Of Life; Present Eternity: Quests of Temporality in the Literary Production of the «Extreme Contemporain» in France (The Writings of Dominique Fourcade and Emmanuel Hocquard); I. Notes on Literature and Experience: Prose and Poetry; II. And Still Everything Happens; III. ""Le sentiment elegiaque que j'ai du contemporain""; Biography; Notes; A Sense of Life in Language Love and Literature; II; III; IV; Notes; The Garden Then and Now; Senseof LifeContemporary and in Genesis; The Garden in Central Park
    Description / Table of Contents: The Ancient Garden in the Book of GenesisThe Garden in the South; The Garden that Is Promised; Notes; SECTION II The Inward Quest; The Evolution of Justice in The Oresteia; Notes; What Maisie Knew in What Maisie Knew; The Double Vision of Life; On the Material Approach to Life; On the Formal Approach to Life; Notes; Style Matters: The Life-Worlds of Ancient Literature; References; James Joyce's ""Ivy Day in the Committee Room"" and The Five Codes of Fiction; Note; References; SECTION III Historicity and Life; Temporality in Fitzgerald's Babylon Revisited; Notes
    Description / Table of Contents: On the Metaphysical Brutishnessof Life in the Light of Zola's The Human BeastThe Mythical Brutishness; The Criminal Brutishness; The Technical Brutishness; Notes; ``Mais Personne Ne Paraissait Comprendre'' (``But no one Seemed to Understand''): Atheism, Nihilism, and Hermeneutics in Albert Camus' L'etranger/The Stranger; Introduction: Understanding ""The Devil's Dilemma"" of Camus' the Stranger; Hermeneutics I: Trying to Understand Meursault as He Does Himself; An Explication of the Text: Understanding and Misunderstanding in The Stranger
    Description / Table of Contents: Pt. I: Meursault the Free Man---What He Does and Does Not UnderstandPt. II: Meursault the Prisoner---What He Does and Does Not Understand; Hermeneutics II: Trying to Understand Meursault Better than He Does Himself; Conclusion: Trying to Understand Meursault Differently from How Camus Does; Notes; Moral Shapes of Time in Henry James; How to Philosophize the Morals of Modernity; Moral Reasoning as Transition in James; Notes; References; SECTION IV The Limits Of Ordinary Experience; ""The Limits of Ordinary Experience"": A Phenomenological Reading of ""Rappaccini's Daughter""; Notes
    Description / Table of Contents: The Kindness of Strangers: Epiphany and Social Communion in Paul Theroux's Travel WritingNotes; Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury as Anti-Entropic Novel; Temporality of the World of the Novel's Fourth Section; Temporality of the World of the Text; Conclusion; Notes; References; SECTION V Destiny, Experience and Time; W.B. Yeats, Unity of Culture, and the Spiritual Telos of Ireland; References; Doom, Destiny, and Grace: The Prodigal Son in Marilynne Robinson's Home; Notes; Man's Destiny in Tischner's Philosophy of Drama; Notes; The Source, Form, and Goal of Art in Anton Chekhov's The Sea Gull
    Description / Table of Contents: The Source of Art
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9789400706248
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIII, 726p, digital)
    Series Statement: Analecta Husserliana, The Yearbook of Phenomenological Research 108
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Transcendentalism overturned
    RVK:
    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Metaphysics ; Phenomenology ; Philosophy of mind ; Science Philosophy ; Philosophy ; Philosophy (General) ; Metaphysics ; Phenomenology ; Philosophy of mind ; Science Philosophy ; Transcendentalism. ; Konferenzschrift 2009 ; Transzendentalphilosophie ; Rezeption ; Phänomenologie ; Lebensphilosophie
    Abstract: This collection offers a critical assessment of transcendentalism, the understanding of consciousness, absolutized as a system of a priori laws of the mind, that was advanced by Kant and Husserl. As these studies show, transcendentalism critically informed 20th Century phenomenological investigation into such issues as temporality, historicity, imagination, objectivity and subjectivity, freedom, ethical judgment, work, praxis. Advances in science have now provoked a questioning of the absolute prerogatives of consciousness. Transcendentalism is challenged by empirical reductionism. And recognition of the role the celestial sphere plays in life on planet earth suggests that a radical shift of philosophy's center of gravity be made away from absolute consciousness and toward the transcendental forces at play in the architectonics of the cosmos.
    Description / Table of Contents: Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Inaugural Lecture; Transcendentalism Overturned; Section I; Historicity and Transcendental Philosophy; Transcendental Philosophy and Fundamental Ontology; Subjektive Logik als Grundlage von objektiver Logik?; Facticity and Transcendentalism: Husserl and the Problem of the ``Geisteswissenschaften''; Section II; Intentionality and Transcendentality; Transcendentality as an Ontic Transgression; How Can We Get a Knowledge of Being? The Relation Between Being and Time in the Young Heidegger; On the Notion of a Phenomenological Constitutionof Objectivity
    Description / Table of Contents: Section IIIIs Ethics Transcendental?; Fichte's Programme for a Philosophy of Freedom; The Paradoxes of Moral in Jean-Paul Sartre's Philosophy; Towards a Responsive Subject: Husserl on Affection; Responsibility and Crisis: Levinas and Husserlon What Calls for Thinking; Transcendental Ethics; Section IV; The Transcendental: Husserl and Kant; Derrida, Husserl's Disciple: How We Should Understand Deconstruction of Transcendental Philosophy; Kant and the Beginnings of German Transcendentalism: Heidegger and Mamardashvili; Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Gilles Deleuzeas Interpreters of Henri Bergson
    Description / Table of Contents: The Concept of Transcendental Exiztenphilosophie in Karl JaspersTranscendentalism Revised: The Impact on Transcendental Consciousness and Structure of Reality Created and Emitted by Mass Media; Section V; Transcendentalism and Original Beginnings; Human Transcending on the Pathway of Moral Creative Becoming; Transcendental and Spiritual Consciousness; The Problem of the Transcendental in Philosophyof Faith - Carl Jaspers Revisited; Section VI; Phenomenology of Questioning: A Meditationon Interogative Mood; Revisting the Transcendental: Design and Materialin Architecture
    Description / Table of Contents: Twilight Splendour (Phenomenological Reflections on Europe)Optimality in Virtual Space - The Generationof Diacritic Potential Through Language; Section VII; Which Transcedentalism? Many Faces of Husserlian Transcedentalism; Eco-Phenomenology and the Interiorization of Man - Using Merleau-Ponty and Nietzsche to Release the "Psyche" from the Human Skull; Understanding Transcendentalism as a Philosophy of the Self; New Transcendentalism and the Logos of Education; Phenomenological Learning in Our Living Reality; Section VIII; Re-construction and Conceptual Analysis
    Description / Table of Contents: William James and Edmund Husserl on the Horizontality of ExperienceRicoeur's Transcendental Concern: A Hermenutics of Discourse; On Value-Perception ("Endowing") as Transcendental Functioning in Husserls Later Phenomenology; Section IX; Action and Work Between Blondel and Scheler:A Practical Transcendentalism?; The Meaning of Existence and Method of Transcendental Phenomenology; The Phenomenon of the Unity of Idea; Nietzsche and the Future of Phenomenology; Section X; Transcendencia Del Ser En El Lenguaje Segun Hegel; Transcendental Philosophy of Culture - Possibilities and Inspirations
    Description / Table of Contents: Percolated Nearness: Immanence of Life and a Material Phenomenology of Time
    Note: "Published under the auspices of The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning, A-T. Tymieniecka, President , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789400718784
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (VI, 254p. 2 illus, digital)
    Series Statement: Library of Ethics and Applied Philosophy 27
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Moral responsibility
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    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Ethics ; Philosophy of law ; medicine Philosophy ; Philosophy of mind ; Philosophy ; Philosophy (General) ; Ethics ; Philosophy of law ; medicine Philosophy ; Philosophy of mind ; Responsibility ; Free will and determinism ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Konferenzschrift 2009 ; Moralische Verantwortung
    Abstract: It is well over a decade since John Fischer and Mark Ravizza - and before them, Jay Wallace and Daniel Dennett - defended responsibility from the threat of determinism. But defending responsibility from determinism is a potentially endless and largely negative enterprise; it can go on for as long as dissenting voices remain, and although such work strengthens the theoretical foundations of these theories, it won't necessarily build anything on top of those foundations, nor will it move these theories into new territory or explain how to apply them to practical contexts. To this end, the papers
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents; Contributors; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Beyond Free Will and Determinism; References; 2 A Structured Taxonomy of Responsibility Concepts; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Six Concepts1; 2.3 Relations Between These Six Responsibility Concepts7; 2.3.1 Outcome Responsibility from Causal and Role Responsibility; 2.3.2 Capacity Responsibility to Causal and Role Responsibility; 2.3.3 Liability Responsibility from Outcome and Virtue Responsibility; 2.3.4 Norm Setting and Substantive Evaluations; 2.4 The Utility of the STRC; 2.4.1 Fifteen Sources of Disputes About Responsibility
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.4.2 A Procedure for Resolving Disputes About Responsibility2.5 The STRC in Action; 2.5.1 Luck Egalitarianism; 2.5.2 Law Suits; 2.6 Conclusion; References; 3 The Relation Between Forward-Looking and Backward-Looking Responsibility; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Notions of Responsibility; 3.3 Responsibility as a Relational Concept; 3.4 The Relation Between Forward-Looking and Backward-Looking Responsibility: A Suggestion; 3.5 Blameworthiness; 3.6 Accountability; 3.7 Conclusions; References; 4 Beyond Belief and Desire: or, How to Be Orthonomous; 4.1 Introduction
    Description / Table of Contents: 4.2 Beyond the Standard Belief-Desire Account of the Explanation of Action4.3 The Nature of Responsibility; 4.4 Implications; References; 5 Blame, Reasons and Capacities; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 The CO Condition; 5.3 Capacities and Possible Worlds; 5.4 An Example; 5.5 Conclusion; References; 6 Please Drink Responsibly: Can the Responsibility of Intoxicated Offenders Be Justified by the Tracing Principle?; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 Components of Criminal Liability: Elements of a Crime; 6.3 Responsibility, Liability and Defences; 6.4 Voluntary or Self-Induced Intoxication
    Description / Table of Contents: 6.5 The Fault of Intoxication6.6 What Makes Intoxication Voluntary or Self-Induced?; References; 7 The Moral Significance of Unintentional Omission: Comparing Will-Centered and Non-will-centered Accounts of Moral Responsibility; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 Moral Blameworthiness and Unintentional Omission; 7.3 Volitionalism; 7.4 Problems with the Volitionalist's Use of the Tracing Strategy; 7.5 Choosing Between Volitionalism and Non-will-centered Approaches; 7.6 Conclusion; References; 8 Desert, Responsibility and Luck Egalitarianism; 8.1 Desert and Responsibility; 8.1.1 Desert: The Basics
    Description / Table of Contents: 8.1.2 Feinberg and Rawls8.1.3 Against the Responsibility View; 8.1.4 The Concept of Desert; 8.1.5 Conclusion; 8.2 Desert and Luck Egalitarianism; 8.2.1 How to Determine the Consequences One Is Liable For; 8.2.2 How to Derive Liability Responsibility from Outcome Responsibility; 8.2.3 Two Questions or One?; 8.2.4 Luck Egalitarianism; 8.3 Conclusion; References; 9 Communicative Revisionism; 9.1 Introduction; 9.2 Justifying Desert in Contractualist Terms; 9.3 Determinism and Theories of Punishment
    Description / Table of Contents: 9.4 Finding a Reasonable Standard for Determining the Mode and Scope of Punishment as Communication
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789048133123 , 9789048133116
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIV, 292 p, digital)
    Series Statement: Philosophical Studies Series 113
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T.
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    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Logic ; Metaphysics ; Ontology ; Linguistics Philosophy ; Philosophy of mind ; Philosophy ; Linguistics Philosophy ; Logic ; Metaphysics ; Ontology ; Philosophy (General) ; Philosophy of mind ; Deskriptivismus ; Referenz ; Bezugssystem ; Referenzsemantik ; Philosophy of Mind
    Abstract: Singular reference to ourselves and the ordinary objects surrounding us is a most crucial philosophical topic, for it looms large in any attempt to understand how language and mind connect to the world. This book explains in detail why in the past philosophers such as Frege, Russell and Reichenbach have favoured a descriptivist approach to this matter and why in more recent times Donnellan, Kripke, Kaplan and others have rather favoured a referentialist standpoint. The now dominant referentialist theories however still have a hard time in addressing propositional attitudes and empty singular terms. Here a way out of this difficulty emerges in an approach that incorporates aspects of the old-fashioned descriptivist views of Frege, Russell and Reichenbach without succumbing to the anti-descriptivist arguments that back up the current referentialist trend. The resulting theory features a novel approach to the semantics and pragmatics of determiner phrases, definite descriptions, proper names and indexicals, all treated in uniform fashion in both their anaphoric and non-anaphoric uses. This work will be of interest to researchers in philosophy of language, philosophy of mind and theoretical linguistics. The wealth of background information and detailed explanations that it provides makes it also accessible to graduate and upper level undergraduates and suitable as a reference book.
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface; Contents; 1 Introduction: Referentialism vs. Descriptivism; 2 Background Notions; 3 Why Descriptivism Was So Successful; 4 Why Referentialism Is So Successful; 5 Definite Descriptions and Proper Names; 6 Indexicals; 7 Tense, Temporal Indexicals and Other Miscellaneous Issues; 8 Conclusion: Accounting for the Referentialist Data; Appendix; Bibliography; Analytical Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789048126460
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (IX, 688p. 2 illus., 1 illus. in color, digital)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Handbook of phenomenology and cognitive science
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    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Phenomenology ; Philosophy of mind ; Psychiatry ; Psychology, clinical ; Philosophy ; Philosophy (General) ; Phenomenology ; Philosophy of mind ; Psychiatry ; Psychology, clinical ; Phenomenology ; Cognitive science ; Phänomenologie ; Kognitionswissenschaft ; Handbuch ; Phänomenologie ; Kognitionswissenschaft ; Handbuch
    Abstract: "The Handbook of Phenomenology and Cognitive Science" contains a comprehensive and authoritative overview of the main ideas and methods currently used at the intersection of phenomenology and the neuro- and cognitive sciences. The idea that phenomenology, in the European continental tradition, has something to offer to the cognitive sciences is a relatively recent development in our attempt to understand the mind. Here in one volume the leading researchers in this area address the central topics that define the intersection between phenomenological studies and the cognitive sciences
    Description / Table of Contents: 0001090506.pdf; Anchor 2; Anchor 3; 0001090474.pdf; Naturalized Phenomenology; Husserl's Anti-naturalism; Transcendental Philosophy and Philosophical Psychology; Philosophical Naturalism; References; 0001090475.pdf; Phenomenology and Non-reductionist Cognitive Science; Introspection and Beyond; Neurophenomenology; Front-Loading Phenomenology; Chaminade and Decety (2002); Farrer and Frith (2002); Farrer et al. (2003); Conclusion; References; 0001090476.pdf; A Toolbox of Phenomenological Methods; 'Phenomenology': One Term - Many Meanings; Phenomenology - Just 'a Way of Seeing'?
    Description / Table of Contents: Spiegelberg's Account of Phenomenological Method as a Series of StepsPhenomenological Methods as a Toolbox - Complementing Spiegelberg's Steps; Naturalization of Phenomenology - a Conciliatory Proposal; References; 0001090477.pdf; Towards a Formalism for Expressing Structures of Consciousness; Towards a Formalism for Philosophical Phenomenology; An Application to Scientific Studies of Consciousness; References; 0001090478.pdf; Consciousness; The Natural Attitude; The Pull of Objectivity; Consciousness as Empirical and as Transcendental; The Intentional Core of Experience
    Description / Table of Contents: Intentionality, Body, and WorldConclusion; References; 0001090479.pdf; Attention in Context; A Gestalt-Phenomenology of Attention; The Context Problem in Attention Research; Connecting Context to Focus; Achieving the Bigger Picture in Cognitive Science of Attention: Attention-in-Context-with-Margin; Dynamic Attention: Context Transformations, Theme Replacements, Attentional Capture; Context Transformations; Theme Replacements; Attentional Capture; Conclusion; References; 0001090480.pdf; The Phenomenology and Neurobiology of Moods and Emotions; Introduction; Damasio and Solomon on Emotion
    Description / Table of Contents: Heidegger on Moods and EmotionsThe Phenomenology of Feeling; Horizons and Bodily Dispositions; Conclusion; References; 0001090481.pdf; Phenomenology, Imagination and Interdisciplinary Research; Introduction: Staking Out the Field; Imagination in Phenomenology; Imagination in Interdisciplinary Research; Conclusion; References; 0001090482.pdf; The Function of Weak Phantasy in Perception and Thinking; Weak Phantasmata in Perception; Phantasmatic, Non-linguistic Modes of Thinking in Humans and Animals; References; 0001090483.pdf
    Description / Table of Contents: Myself with No Body? Body, Bodily-Consciousness and Self-consciousnessA Certain Unity; Four Irreducible Bodily Dimensions; The Body-As-Object; The Body-As-Subject; Being a Bodily Subject Out of One's Body; (De)constructing One's Bodily-Self; Conclusion; References; 0001090484.pdf; A Husserlian, Neurophenomenologic Approach to Embodiment; A Description of Lived Experience; One's Own Body; Multi-sensorial Integration Through the Act; Transforming the Subjective into the Objective; The Hand Touching and Touched; Summary; References; 0001090485.pdf; Body and Movement: Basic Dynamic Principles
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789048192250
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XVIII, 322 p, digital)
    Series Statement: Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 287
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Bunge, Mario, 1919 - 2020 Matter and mind
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    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Philosophy of mind ; Science Philosophy ; Philosophy ; Philosophy (General) ; Philosophy of mind ; Science Philosophy ; Leib-Seele-Problem
    Abstract: This book discusses two of the oldest and hardest problems in both science and philosophy: What is matter?, and What is mind? A reason for tackling both problems in a single book is that two of the most influential views in modern philosophy are that the universe is mental (idealism), and that the everything real is material (materialism). Most of the thinkers who espouse a materialist view of mind have obsolete ideas about matter, whereas those who claim that science supports idealism have not explained how the universe could have existed before humans emerged. Besides, both groups tend to ignore the other levels of existence - chemical, biological, social, and technological. If such levels and the concomitant emergence processes are ignored, the physicalism/spiritualism dilemma remains unsolved, whereas if they are included, the alleged mysteries are shown to be problems that science is treating successfully.
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface; Contents; Introduction; Part I Matter; 1 Philosophy as Worldview; 2 Classical Matter: Bodies and Fields; 3 Quantum Matter: Weird But Real; 4 General Concept of Matter: To Be Is To Become; 5 Emergence and Levels; 6 Naturalism; 7 Materialism; Part II Mind; 8 The Mind-Body Problem; 9 Minding Matter: The Plastic Brain; 10 Mind and Society; 11 Cognition, Consciousness, and Free Will; 12 Brain and Computer: The Hardware/Software Dualism; 13 Knowledge: Genuine and Bogus; Part III Appendices; 14 Appendix A: Objects; 15 Appendix B: Truths; References; Index
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. 287-304) and index
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789400700710
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource , v.: digital
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Springer eBook Collection. Humanities, Social Science and Law Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Series Statement: Phaenomenologica, Published Under the Auspices of the Husserl-Archives 200
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    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Genetic epistemology ; Metaphysics ; Phenomenology ; Philosophy of mind ; Science Philosophy ; Husserl, Edmund 1859-1938 ; Transzendentale Phänomenologie ; Humanwissenschaften ; Naturwissenschaften
    Abstract: This volume is a broad anthology addressing many if not most major topics in phenomenology and philosophy in general: from foundational and methodological concerns to investigations in anthropology, ethics and theology, from highly specialized research into typically Husserlian topics to the complex relations among pure phenomenology, phenomenological psychology and cognitive science. Many contributions are the product and synthesis of a life-long engagement with phenomenology by leading and established scholars. The volume also has a strong international orientation, acknowledging the variety of perspectives and receptions of Husserl's works in different philosophical cultures and contexts, bringing together researchers from across the globe.
    Description / Table of Contents: 1. The nature and methods of phenomenology2. Phenomenology and the sciences -- 3. Phenomenology and consciousness -- 4. Phenomenology and practical philosophy -- 5. Reality and ideality.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9781402068935
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource , v.: digital
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Springer eBook Collection. Humanities, Social Science and Law Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Series Statement: Studies in the History of Philosophy of Mind 7
    DDC: 128.33
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    Keywords: Philosophy (General) ; Science (General) ; Science History ; Philosophy of mind ; Rationalismus ; Ideengeschichte
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
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