Normativity, Meaning, and the Promise of Phenomenology (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Burch, Matthew; McMullin, Irene; Marsh, Jack
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Redaktion: Burch, Matthew; McMullin, Irene; Marsh, Jack
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The aim of this volume is to assess the philosophical importance of phenomenology as a method for studying the normativity of meaning and its transcendental conditions.
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The aim of this volume is to assess the philosophical importance of phenomenology as a method for studying the normativity of meaning and its transcendental conditions.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 378
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351064415
- Artikelnr.: 56786701
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 378
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351064415
- Artikelnr.: 56786701
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Matthew Burch is a philosophy lecturer at the University of Essex. His research interests lie at the intersection of phenomenology and the cognitive and social sciences. He has published in Inquiry, The European Journal of Philosophy, and Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences. He is currently a Research Fellow with the Independent Social Research Foundation. Jack Marsh is a St. Leonard's Scholar in Religion at the University of St. Andrews. He is the author of Saying Violence: Levinas, Chauvinism, Disinterest (forthcoming). His work has appeared in many journals, including Philosophy and Social Criticism, Levinas Studies, and Philosophy Today. Irene McMullin teaches philosophy at the University of Essex. She specializes in Ethics and 20th Century European philosophy. In 2013 she published Time and the Shared World: Heidegger on Social Relations. Her second book, Existential Flourishing: A Phenomenology of the Virtues, is forthcoming.
Introduction
Matthew Burch, Jack Marsh, and Irene McMullin
Section I: Normativity, Meaning, and the Limits of Phenomenology
1. Constitutive, Prescriptive, Technical or Ideal? On the Ambiguity of the
Term 'Norm'
Sara Heinämaa
2. The Space of Meaning, Phenomenology, and the Normative Turn
Leslie MacAvoy
3. Mind, Meaning and Metaphysics: Another Look
Dan Zahavi
4. Ground, Background, and Rough Ground: Dreyfus, Wittgenstein, and
Phenomenology
David Cerbone
5. Inauthentic Theologizing and Phenomenological Method
Martin Kavka
Section II: Sources of Normativity
6. Intentionality and (Moral) Normativity
John Drummond
7. The Sources of Practical Normativity Reconsidered - with Kant and
Levinas
Inga Römer
8. Resoluteness and Gratitude for the Good
Irene McMullin
Section III: Normativity and Nature
9. On Being a Human Self
Mark Okrent
10. Normativity with a Human Face: Placing Intentional Norms and
Intentional Agents back in Nature
Glenda Satne & Bernardo Ainbinder
11. World-Articulating Animals
Joseph Rouse
Section IV: Attuned Agency
12. Moods as Active
Joe Schear
13. Against Our Better Judgment
Matthew Burch
14. Everyday Eros: Toward a Phenomenology of Erotic Inception
Jack Marsh
Section V: Epistemic Normativity
15. Normativity and Knowledge
Walter Hopp
16. Appearance, Judgment, and Norms
Charles Siewert
17. Husserl's and Heidegger's Transcendental Projects: From the Natural
Attitude to Functioning Intentionality
Dermot Moran
Afterword
A Philosophy of Mind: Phenomenology, Normativity, and Meaning
Steven Crowell
Matthew Burch, Jack Marsh, and Irene McMullin
Section I: Normativity, Meaning, and the Limits of Phenomenology
1. Constitutive, Prescriptive, Technical or Ideal? On the Ambiguity of the
Term 'Norm'
Sara Heinämaa
2. The Space of Meaning, Phenomenology, and the Normative Turn
Leslie MacAvoy
3. Mind, Meaning and Metaphysics: Another Look
Dan Zahavi
4. Ground, Background, and Rough Ground: Dreyfus, Wittgenstein, and
Phenomenology
David Cerbone
5. Inauthentic Theologizing and Phenomenological Method
Martin Kavka
Section II: Sources of Normativity
6. Intentionality and (Moral) Normativity
John Drummond
7. The Sources of Practical Normativity Reconsidered - with Kant and
Levinas
Inga Römer
8. Resoluteness and Gratitude for the Good
Irene McMullin
Section III: Normativity and Nature
9. On Being a Human Self
Mark Okrent
10. Normativity with a Human Face: Placing Intentional Norms and
Intentional Agents back in Nature
Glenda Satne & Bernardo Ainbinder
11. World-Articulating Animals
Joseph Rouse
Section IV: Attuned Agency
12. Moods as Active
Joe Schear
13. Against Our Better Judgment
Matthew Burch
14. Everyday Eros: Toward a Phenomenology of Erotic Inception
Jack Marsh
Section V: Epistemic Normativity
15. Normativity and Knowledge
Walter Hopp
16. Appearance, Judgment, and Norms
Charles Siewert
17. Husserl's and Heidegger's Transcendental Projects: From the Natural
Attitude to Functioning Intentionality
Dermot Moran
Afterword
A Philosophy of Mind: Phenomenology, Normativity, and Meaning
Steven Crowell
Introduction
Matthew Burch, Jack Marsh, and Irene McMullin
Section I: Normativity, Meaning, and the Limits of Phenomenology
1. Constitutive, Prescriptive, Technical or Ideal? On the Ambiguity of the
Term 'Norm'
Sara Heinämaa
2. The Space of Meaning, Phenomenology, and the Normative Turn
Leslie MacAvoy
3. Mind, Meaning and Metaphysics: Another Look
Dan Zahavi
4. Ground, Background, and Rough Ground: Dreyfus, Wittgenstein, and
Phenomenology
David Cerbone
5. Inauthentic Theologizing and Phenomenological Method
Martin Kavka
Section II: Sources of Normativity
6. Intentionality and (Moral) Normativity
John Drummond
7. The Sources of Practical Normativity Reconsidered - with Kant and
Levinas
Inga Römer
8. Resoluteness and Gratitude for the Good
Irene McMullin
Section III: Normativity and Nature
9. On Being a Human Self
Mark Okrent
10. Normativity with a Human Face: Placing Intentional Norms and
Intentional Agents back in Nature
Glenda Satne & Bernardo Ainbinder
11. World-Articulating Animals
Joseph Rouse
Section IV: Attuned Agency
12. Moods as Active
Joe Schear
13. Against Our Better Judgment
Matthew Burch
14. Everyday Eros: Toward a Phenomenology of Erotic Inception
Jack Marsh
Section V: Epistemic Normativity
15. Normativity and Knowledge
Walter Hopp
16. Appearance, Judgment, and Norms
Charles Siewert
17. Husserl's and Heidegger's Transcendental Projects: From the Natural
Attitude to Functioning Intentionality
Dermot Moran
Afterword
A Philosophy of Mind: Phenomenology, Normativity, and Meaning
Steven Crowell
Matthew Burch, Jack Marsh, and Irene McMullin
Section I: Normativity, Meaning, and the Limits of Phenomenology
1. Constitutive, Prescriptive, Technical or Ideal? On the Ambiguity of the
Term 'Norm'
Sara Heinämaa
2. The Space of Meaning, Phenomenology, and the Normative Turn
Leslie MacAvoy
3. Mind, Meaning and Metaphysics: Another Look
Dan Zahavi
4. Ground, Background, and Rough Ground: Dreyfus, Wittgenstein, and
Phenomenology
David Cerbone
5. Inauthentic Theologizing and Phenomenological Method
Martin Kavka
Section II: Sources of Normativity
6. Intentionality and (Moral) Normativity
John Drummond
7. The Sources of Practical Normativity Reconsidered - with Kant and
Levinas
Inga Römer
8. Resoluteness and Gratitude for the Good
Irene McMullin
Section III: Normativity and Nature
9. On Being a Human Self
Mark Okrent
10. Normativity with a Human Face: Placing Intentional Norms and
Intentional Agents back in Nature
Glenda Satne & Bernardo Ainbinder
11. World-Articulating Animals
Joseph Rouse
Section IV: Attuned Agency
12. Moods as Active
Joe Schear
13. Against Our Better Judgment
Matthew Burch
14. Everyday Eros: Toward a Phenomenology of Erotic Inception
Jack Marsh
Section V: Epistemic Normativity
15. Normativity and Knowledge
Walter Hopp
16. Appearance, Judgment, and Norms
Charles Siewert
17. Husserl's and Heidegger's Transcendental Projects: From the Natural
Attitude to Functioning Intentionality
Dermot Moran
Afterword
A Philosophy of Mind: Phenomenology, Normativity, and Meaning
Steven Crowell