The Routledge Companion to Phenomenology.
Phenomenology was one of the twentieth century's major philosophical movements and continues to be a vibrant and widely studied subject today. The Routledge Companion to Phenomenology is an outstanding guide and reference source to the key philosophers, topics and themes in this exciting subjec...
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
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Hoboken :
Taylor & Francis,
2012
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Series: | Routledge philosophy companions.
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Local Note: | ProQuest Ebook Central |
Table of Contents:
- Front Cover; The Routledge Companion to Phenomenology; Copyright Page; Contents; Notes on contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Sebastian Luft and Søren Overgaard; Part I: Main figures in the phenomenological movement; 1. Franz Brentano: Peter Simons; 2. Edmund Husserl: Dermot Moran; 3. Max Scheler: Eugene Kelly; 4. Martin Heidegger: Daniel Dahlstrom; 5. Jean-Paul Sartre: Roland Breeur; 6. Emmanuel Levinas: Richard A. Cohen; 7. Hannah Arendt: Veronica Vasterling; 8. Simone de Beauvoir: Gail Weiss; 9. Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Komarine Romdenh-Romluc.
- 10. Jacques Derrida: Björn ThorsteinssonPart II: Main topics in phenomenology; 11. Intentionality: John J. Drummond; 12. Evidence: Roberto Walton; 13. Perception: Walter Hopp; 14. Truth: Thane M. Naberhaus; 15. The subject and the self: Karl Mertens; 16. Intersubjectivity: Dan Zahavi; 17. Time: Nicolas De Warren; 18. Space: Edward S. Casey; 19. The world: Carleton B. Christensen; 20. The body: Sara Heinämaa; 21. History: David Carr; 22. Husserl's method of reduction: Sebastian Luft; 23. Eidetics and its methodology: Rochus Sowa; 24. Genetic phenomenology: Dieter Lohmar.
- 25. Methods in phenomenology after Husserl: David R. Cerbone26. Art and aesthetics: John B. Brough; 27. Value: Peter Poellner; 28. The meaning of being: Thomas Schwarz Wentzer; 29. Dasein Françoise Dastur; 30. Freedom: Jonathan Webber; 31. The chiasm: Ted Toadvine; 32. Ethics as first philosophy: Bettina Bergo; 33. Narrative: Pol Vandevelde; Part III: Phenomenological contributions to philosophy; 34. Metaphysics and ontology: Martin Schwab and David Woodruff Smith; 35. Epistemology: Gianfranco Soldati; 36. Philosophy of mind: Charles Siewert.
- 37. Philosophy of language: Christian Beyer and Martin Weichold38. Moral philosophy: Sonja Rinofner-Kreidl; 39. Political philosophy: James Dodd; 40. Logic: Richard Tieszen; 41. Philosophy of mathematics: Mirja Hartimo and Leila Haaparanta; 42. Philosophy of science: Jeff Kochan and Hans Bernhard Schmid; 43. Philosophy of religion and theology: Felix Ó Murchadha; Part IV: Phenomenological intersections; 44. Existentialism: Jack Reynolds; 45. Hermeneutics: Günter Figal and David Espinet; 46. Deconstruction: Leonard Lawlor; 47. Feminism: Helen A. Fielding.
- 48. Post-structuralism: Michel Foucault: Johanna Oksala49. Critical theory: Ernst Wolff; 50. Critical philosophy of race: Robert Bernasconi; 51. Analytic philosophy: Søren Overgaard; 52. Cognitive science: Shaun Gallagher; 53. Phenomenological psychology: James Morley; 54. Psychoanalysis: Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar; 55. Psychiatry: Thomas Fuchs; 56. Nursing and medicine: Havi Carel; 57. The social sciences: Michael Barber; 58. Literary criticism: Joshua Kates; Part V: Historical postscript; 59. "Phenomenology": a reflection on the history of the term: Karl Schuhmann; Index.