Fr. 229.00

The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Phenomenology

Anglais · Livre Relié

Expédition généralement dans un délai de 3 à 5 semaines

Description

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The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Phenomenology presents twenty-eight essays by some of the leading figures in the field, and gives an authoritative overview of the type of work and range of topics found and discussed in contemporary phenomenology. The essays aim to articulate and develop original theoretical perspectives. Some of them are concerned with issues and questions typical and distinctive of phenomenological philosophy, while others address questions familiar to analytic philosophers, but do so with arguments and ideas taken from phenomenology. Some offer detailed analyses of concrete phenomena; others take a more comprehensive perspective and seek to outline and motivate the future direction of phenomenology.
The handbook will be a rich source of insight and stimulation for philosophers, students of philosophy, and for people working in other disciplines of the humanities, social sciences, and sciences, who are interested in the state of phenomenology today. It is the definitive guide to what is currently going on in phenomenology. It includes discussions of such diverse topics as intentionality, embodiment, perception, naturalism, temporality, self-consciousness, language, knowledge, ethics, politics, art and religion, and will make it clear that phenomenology, far from being a tradition of the past, is alive and in a position to make valuable contributions to contemporary thought.

Table des matières

  • Introduction

  • I Subjectivity and Nature

  • 1: David Cerbone: Phenomenological Method: Reflection, Introspection, and Skepticism

  • 2: Steven Crowell: Transcendental Phenomenology and the Seductions of Naturalism: Subjectivity, Consciousness, and Meaning

  • 3: Charles Siewert: Respecting appearances: A phenomenological approach to consciousness

  • 4: Shaun Gallagher: On the possibility of naturalizing phenomenology

  • 5: Renaud Barbaras: The phenomenology of life: desire as the being of the subject

  • II Intentionality, Perception and Embodiment

  • 6: John Drummond: Intentionality without representationalism

  • 7: D.W. Smith: Perception, context and direct realism

  • 8: Junichi Murata: Colors and sounds: The field of visual and auditory consciousness

  • 9: Donn Welton: Bodily Intentionality, Affectivity and Basic Affects

  • 10: Komarine Romdenh-Romluc: Thought in action

  • 11: Sara Heinämaa: Sex, Gender and Embodiment

  • 12: Ed Casey: At the edge(s) of my body

  • III Self and Consciousness

  • 13: Laszlo Tengelyi: Action and selfhood: a narrative interpretation

  • 14: Dorothée Legrand: Self-consciousness and world-consciousness

  • 15: Dan Zahavi: Self, consciousness and shame

  • IV Language, thinking, and knowledge

  • 16: Walter Hopp: The (many) foundations of knowledge

  • 17: Dominique Pradelle: The phenomenological foundations of predicative structure

  • 18: Dieter Lohmar: Language and non-linguistic thinking

  • 19: Hans Bernhard Schmid: Sharing in Truth: Phenomenology of Epistemic Commonality

  • V Ethics, politics, and sociality

  • 20: Bernhard Waldenfels: Responsive ethics

  • 21: Klaus Held: Towards a Phenomenology of the Political World

  • 22: Søren Overgaard: Other People

  • VI Time and history

  • 23: David Carr: Experience and history

  • 24: Nicolas de Warren: The forgiveness of time and consciousness

  • 25: Günter Figal: Hermeneutic Phenomenology

  • VII Art and religion

  • 26: John Brough: Something That Is Nothing but Can Be Anything: the Image and Our Consciousness of It

  • 27: Rudolf Bernet: Phenomenological and aesthetic epochè: Painting the invisible things themselves.

  • 28: Anthony Steinbock: Evidence in the phenomenology of religious experience

Commentaire

the volume as a whole is ample evidence that phenomenology perdures, being on a philosophical and methodological trajectory that has seen out the 20th century and is alive and kicking in the 21st... this Handbook justifies some optimism about both what the future holds for phenomenology, and what phenomenology promises to contribute to the future of philosophy Jack Reynolds, Philosophy in Review

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