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Phenomenology in a New Key: Between Analysis and History
(Englisch)
Essays in Honor of Richard Cobb-Stevens
Bloechl, Jeffrey & de Warren, Nicolas

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Phenomenology in a New Key: Between Analysis and History

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Produktbeschreibung

Presents a collection of essays on various topics in phenomenological philosophy by leading experts in North America and Europe

Examines the relation between Husserl´s phenomenology and Aristotle; the relation between Hobbes and Husserl on language; the contribution of Husserl´s thinking to ethics

Features the importance of a phenomenological approach to art; and the phenomenological contribution to questions of consciousness and intentionality


Jeffrey Bloechl is Director of Graduate Studies in the department of Philosophy at Boston College. Nicolas de Warren is Research Professor in Philosophy at the Institute of Philosophy / Husserl Archives at KU Leuven.
In this collection of essays, the sophistication and vibrancy of contemporary phenomenological research is documented, including both its engagement with key figures in the history of philosophy, and with critical problems defining future directions of philosophical investigations. It honors the writings of Richard Cobb-Stevens, whose work in phenomenological philosophy, analytic philosophy and the history of philosophy has served as model for generations of philosophers working between these three fields of research. The essays collected in this volume provide a unique window on the contemporary state of the art in phenomenological philosophy by leading scholars of international reputation from North America and Europe.  Historical figures such as Aristotle and Hobbes are innovatively brought into dialogue with phenomenological thinking. Phenomenological thinking is brought to bear on a wide variety of problems, from the nature of artworks and photography to questions concerning consciousness and knowledge. Among the topics discussed in these specially commissioned essays:  phenomenology and Aristotle; the nature of the primal ego; Hobbes and Husserl; intentionality and reference; Neo-Aristotelian ethics; Husserl and Wittgenstein; photography; the nature of artworks.
Vindicating Husserl´s primal I.- Intersections between four phenomenological approaches to the work of art.- The Curious Image: Husserlian Thoughts on Photography.- Hobbes and Husserl.- From the World to Philosophy, and Back.- Sense and Reference, Again.- Transcendental Phenomenology?.- Neo-Aristotelian Ethics: Naturalistic or Phenomenological.- Phenomenal Experience and the Scope of Phenomenology: A Husserlian Response to some Wittgensteinean Remarks.- Thinking Fast: Freedom, Expertise, and Solicitation.- Aristotle and Phenomenology.- Index.
In this collection of essays, the sophistication and vibrancy of contemporary phenomenological research is documented, including both its engagement with key figures in the history of philosophy, and with critical problems defining future directions of philosophical investigations. It honors the writings of Richard Cobb-Stevens, whose work in phenomenological philosophy, analytic philosophy and the history of philosophy has served as model for generations of philosophers working between these three fields of research. The essays collected in this volume provide a unique window on the contemporary state of the art in phenomenological philosophy by leading scholars of international reputation from North America and Europe. Historical figures such as Aristotle and Hobbes are innovatively brought into dialogue with phenomenological thinking. Phenomenological thinking is brought to bear on a wide variety of problems, from the nature of artworks and photography to questions concerning consciousness and knowledge. Among the topics discussed in these specially commissioned essays: phenomenology and Aristotle; the nature of the primal ego; Hobbes and Husserl; intentionality and reference; Neo-Aristotelian ethics; Husserl and Wittgenstein; photography; the nature of artworks.

"This book is of interest to those wishing to explore the intersections between the classical phenomenological canon–Husserl especially–and fields lying, as it were, on the frontiers or borderlands of this canon: philosophy of art, early modern philosophy, analytic philosophy, ethics, and ancient philosophy. In this way, it is useful to specialists in phenomenology and Husserl scholarship for the depth and rigor of the contributions as well as to those coming to phenomenology from a different corner of philosophy.” (Keith Whitmoyer, Phenomenological Reviews, reviews.ophen.org, March, 2016)



This book presents a collection of essays that examine a wide variety of problems through the lens of phenomenology, from the nature of artworks and photography to questions concerning consciousness and intentionality.
In this collection of essays, the sophistication and vibrancy of contemporary phenomenological research is documented, including both its engagement with key figures in the history of philosophy, and with critical problems defining future directions of philosophical investigations. It honors the writings of Richard Cobb-Stevens, whose work in phenomenological philosophy, analytic philosophy and the history of philosophy has served as model for generations of philosophers working between these three fields of research. The essays collected in this volume provide a unique window on the contemporary state of the art in phenomenological philosophy by leading scholars of international reputation from North America and Europe. Historical figures such as Aristotle and Hobbes are innovatively brought into dialogue with phenomenological thinking. Phenomenological thinking is brought to bear on a wide variety of problems, from the nature of artworks and photography to questions concerning consciousness and knowledge. Among the topics discussed in these specially commissioned essays: phenomenology and Aristotle; the nature of the primal ego; Hobbes and Husserl; intentionality and reference; Neo-Aristotelian ethics; Husserl and Wittgenstein; photography; the nature of artworks.
Vindicating Husserl's primal I.- Intersections between four phenomenological approaches to the work of art.- The Curious Image: Husserlian Thoughts on Photography.- Hobbes and Husserl.- From the World to Philosophy, and Back.- Sense and Reference, Again.- Transcendental Phenomenology?.- Neo-Aristotelian Ethics: Naturalistic or Phenomenological.- Phenomenal Experience and the Scope of Phenomenology: A Husserlian Response to some Wittgensteinean Remarks.- Thinking Fast: Freedom, Expertise, and Solicitation.- Aristotle and Phenomenology.- Index.

"This book is of interest to those wishing to explore the intersections between the classical phenomenological canon-Husserl especially-and fields lying, as it were, on the frontiers or borderlands of this canon: philosophy of art, early modern philosophy, analytic philosophy, ethics, and ancient philosophy. In this way, it is useful to specialists in phenomenology and Husserl scholarship for the depth and rigor of the contributions as well as to those coming to phenomenology from a different corner of philosophy." (Keith Whitmoyer, Phenomenological Reviews, reviews.ophen.org, March, 2016)




Über den Autor

Jeffrey Bloechl is Director of Graduate Studies in the department of Philosophy at Boston College. Nicolas de Warren is Research Professor in Philosophy at the Institute of Philosophy / Husserl Archives at KU Leuven.


Inhaltsverzeichnis



Vindicating Husserl's primal I.- Intersections between four phenomenological approaches to the work of art.- The Curious Image: Husserlian Thoughts on Photography.- Hobbes and Husserl.- From the World to Philosophy, and Back.- Sense and Reference, Again.- Transcendental Phenomenology?.- Neo-Aristotelian Ethics: Naturalistic or Phenomenological.- Phenomenal Experience and the Scope of Phenomenology: A Husserlian Response to some Wittgensteinean Remarks.- Thinking Fast: Freedom, Expertise, and Solicitation.- Aristotle and Phenomenology.- Index.


Klappentext

In this collection of essays, the sophistication and vibrancy of contemporary phenomenological research is documented, including both its engagement with key figures in the history of philosophy, and with critical problems defining future directions of philosophical investigations. It honors the writings of Richard Cobb-Stevens, whose work in phenomenological philosophy, analytic philosophy and the history of philosophy has served as model for generations of philosophers working between these three fields of research. The essays collected in this volume provide a unique window on the contemporary state of the art in phenomenological philosophy by leading scholars of international reputation from North America and Europe.  Historical figures such as Aristotle and Hobbes are innovatively brought into dialogue with phenomenological thinking. Phenomenological thinking is brought to bear on a wide variety of problems, from the nature of artworks and photography to questions concerning consciousness and knowledge. Among the topics discussed in these specially commissioned essays:  phenomenology and Aristotle; the nature of the primal ego; Hobbes and Husserl; intentionality and reference; Neo-Aristotelian ethics; Husserl and Wittgenstein; photography; the nature of artworks.




Presents a collection of essays on various topics in phenomenological philosophy by leading experts in North America and Europe

Examines the relation between Husserl's phenomenology and Aristotle; the relation between Hobbes and Husserl on language; the contribution of Husserl's thinking to ethics

Features the importance of a phenomenological approach to art; and the phenomenological contribution to questions of consciousness and intentionality

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