The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Phenomenology
Herausgeber: Zahavi, Dan
The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Phenomenology
Herausgeber: Zahavi, Dan
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This is the definitive guide to phenomenology today. It includes discussions of such diverse topics as intentionality, embodiment, perception, naturalism, temporality, self-consciousness, language, knowledge, ethics, politics, art and religion, and demonstrate the breadth and value of phenomenology's contributions to contemporary thought.
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This is the definitive guide to phenomenology today. It includes discussions of such diverse topics as intentionality, embodiment, perception, naturalism, temporality, self-consciousness, language, knowledge, ethics, politics, art and religion, and demonstrate the breadth and value of phenomenology's contributions to contemporary thought.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 632
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juli 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 1064g
- ISBN-13: 9780198753025
- ISBN-10: 0198753020
- Artikelnr.: 47864722
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 632
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juli 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 1064g
- ISBN-13: 9780198753025
- ISBN-10: 0198753020
- Artikelnr.: 47864722
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Dan Zahavi is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Copenhagen, Director of the Center for Subjectivity Research, and co-editor in chief of the journal Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences. He is past president of the Nordic Society for Phenomenology (2001-2007). His publications include Husserl und die transzendentale Intersubjektivität (1996), Self-awareness and Alterity (1999), Husserl's Phenomenology (2003), Subjectivity and Selfhood (2005), Phänomenologie für Einsteiger (2007), and The Phenomenological Mind (with Shaun Gallagher) (2008).
* 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
* 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
* 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
* 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