A Companion to Phenomenology and Existentialism
Samenvatting
A Companion to Phenomenology and Existentialism is a complete guide to two of the dominant movements of philosophy in the twentieth century.
Written by a team of leading scholars, including Dagfinn Føllesdal, J. N. Mohanty, Robert Solomon, Jean–Luc Marion
Highlights the area of overlap between the two movements
Features longer essays discussing each of the main schools of thought, shorter essays introducing prominent themes, and problem–oriented chapters
Organised topically, around concepts such as temporality, intentionality, death and nihilism
Features essays on unusual subjects, such as medicine, the emotions, artificial intelligence, and environmental philosophy
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
<p>Notes on Contributors ix</p>
<p>Acknowledgments xiv</p>
<p>1 A Brief Introduction to Phenomenology and Existentialism 1<br /> Mark A. Wrathall and Hubert L. Dreyfus</p>
<p>PART I PHENOMENOLOGY 7</p>
<p>MAIN MOVEMENTS 8</p>
<p>2 Husserlian Phenomenology 9<br /> Steven Crowell</p>
<p>3 Existential Phenomenology 31<br /> Mark A. Wrathall</p>
<p>4 French Phenomenology 48<br /> François–David Sebbah</p>
<p>CENTRAL CONCEPTS 68</p>
<p>5 Intentionality 69<br /> J. N. Mohanty</p>
<p>6 Consciousness 78<br /> Charles Siewert</p>
<p>7 The Lifeworld and Lived Experience 91<br /> Martin Jay</p>
<p>8 Husserl s Reductions and the Role They Play in His Phenomenology 105<br /> Dagfinn Føllesdal</p>
<p>9 Categorial Intuition 115<br /> Dieter Lohmar</p>
<p>10 Temporality 127<br /> John B. Brough and William Blattner</p>
<p>PART II EXISTENTIALISM 135</p>
<p>MAIN MOVEMENTS 136</p>
<p>11 The Roots of Existentialism 137<br /> Hubert L. Dreyfus</p>
<p>12 German Existence–Philosophy 162<br /> Udo Tietz</p>
<p>13 Religious Existentialism 188<br /> Clancy Martin</p>
<p>14 French Existentialism 206<br /> Robert Wicks</p>
<p>CENTRAL CONCEPTS 228</p>
<p>15 The Concept of Authenticity 229<br /> Taylor Carman</p>
<p>16 Affectivity 240<br /> Béatrice Han–Pile</p>
<p>17 The Body 253<br /> Piotr Hoffman</p>
<p>18 Freedom and Responsibility 263<br /> Frederick A. Olafson</p>
<p>19 Absurdity 271<br /> David Sherman</p>
<p>20 Death 280<br /> David Couzens Hoy</p>
<p>PART III CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN PHENOMENOLOGY AND EXISTENTIALISM 289</p>
<p>21 Emotions in Phenomenology and Existentialism 291<br /> Robert C. Solomon</p>
<p>22 The Egological Structure of Consciousness: Lessons from Sartre for Analytical Philosophy of Mind 310<br /> Manuel Bremer</p>
<p>23 Phenomenology, Neuroscience, and Intersubjectivity 329<br /> Matthew Ratcliffe</p>
<p>24 The Intrinsic Spatial Frame of Reference 346<br /> Shaun Gallagher</p>
<p>25 Action, the Scientific Worldview, and Being–in–the–World 356<br /> Craig DeLancey</p>
<p>26 Phenomenology in Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science 377<br /> Daniel Andler</p>
<p>27 Phenomenological Currents in Twentieth–Century Psychology 394<br /> Frederick J. Wertz</p>
<p>28 Medicine 412<br /> Fredrik Svenaeus</p>
<p>29 Realism, Science, and the Deworlding of the World 425<br /> Peter Eli Gordon</p>
<p>30 Environmental Philosophy 445<br /> Iain Thomson</p>
<p>31 Ontology, Pragmatism, and Technology 464<br /> Shunsuke Kadowaki</p>
<p>32 The Lived–Body and the Dignity of Human Beings 478<br /> Andreas Brenner</p>
<p>33 Sexuality 489<br /> Ann V. Murphy</p>
<p>34 Feminism 502<br /> Sara Heinämaa</p>
<p>35 A Life Worth Living 516<br /> Julian Young</p>
<p>36 The Search for Immediacy and the Problem of Political Life in Existentialism and Phenomenology 531<br /> Michael Allen Gillespie</p>
<p>37 History and Historicity 545<br /> Charles Guignon</p>
<p>38 Bubbles and Skulls: The Phenomenology of Self–Consciousness in Dutch Still–Life Painting 559<br /> Wayne M. Martin</p>
<p>39 Mathematics 585<br /> Mark van Atten</p>
<p>Index 600</p>