The Great Plan of Life: The Phenomenology of Life's Return to the Sources of Western Philosophy; A-T. Tymieniecka. Part One: Life, Logos, Phenomenon. Life as Logos and Tao: On Husserl's Ideas and the Comparative Study of Western and Chinese Philosophies; Liu Qingping. Logos, Telos and the Lived World: A View in Phenomenological Reflection; D. Sinha. The Pseudo-Concepts Phenomenon and LambdaOmicronGammaOmicronSigma in the Phenomenological Philosophies: A Viable Alternative; H. Matthai. The Leibnizian Dimension of Husserl's Phenomenology; A. Giuculescu. Part Two: Self-Individualisation of Life: Ingathering and Outward Radiation. The Intrinsic Value of Life and the Problem of Natural Teleology; F. Soontiens. Predetermination and Change in Living Beings: A Study Based on Nicolai Hartmann's Contribution; C. Mínguez. The Self-Individualization of Life: Parallels between the Generative Principles in Psychological and Biological Development; T.E. Sprey. Emanuel Swedenborg's Physical and Metaphysical Revelation; C.A. Blom-Dahl. Metaphysics and Vitalism in Henri Bergson's Biophilosophy: A New Look; S. Spassov. Part Three: The Ego, Subjectivity, and the Incarnated Subject. El mito de la subjetividad; F. Montero Moliner. Ortega y Gasset's Executive I and his Criticism of Phenomenological Idealism; F. López-Frías. Becoming of Ego and the Incarnated Subject; M. Hakoishi. Reason in Vital Experience in Ortega y Gasset; J. Conill. Part Four: Human Creative Virtualities Radiating at Their Peak. The Creative Source: Rodin; M. Kronegger. Visualizing Tymieniecka's Poetica Nova; P. Trutty-Coohill. Authenticity and Creativity: An Existentialist Perspective; V.C. Thomas. TheOntology of Artistic Time and the Phenomenology of Husserl; N.A. Kormine. Part Five: Life Timing Itself Creatively Throughout and Beyond. A Bridge to Temporality: Phenomenological Reflections on the Presence of Things Past and Future According to St. Augustine's Confessions; J. García-Gómez. Actio, Passio et Creatio in the Endliche und ewige Philosophie of Edith Stein: A Poetico-Personal Response to the Challenges of Postmodernity; A. Calcagno. Meister Eckhart on Temporality and the `Now': A Phenomenological-Hermeneutical Interpretation; I. Landau. Zen and Tymieniecka's Three Movements of the Soul; D. Zelinski. Part Six: Creative Permeation of Vital Sense: The Aesthetic Sense of Life and Science. The Imagination as the Origin of Science: Rupture and Continuity with the Quotidian Lifeworld; L. Flores H. From Mourning to Melancholy: Toward a Phenomenology of the Modern Human Condition; W. Bałus. Mimesis, law and Medicine; J.M. Broekman. Part Seven: Attunement of Sameness and Alterity in the Cultural and Societal Networks of Life. A. Schütz: Phenomenology and Understanding Sociology; C. López Sáenz. A Cultural Archaeology of the Insane Genius; S.G. Schull. Schizophrenia as a Problem of the Theory of Intersubjectivity; V. Borodulin, A. Vasiljev, V. Popov. Règne animal and humain: Nature intersubjective; J. Sivak. Part Eight: Drive Toward the Unity-of-Everything-There-Is-Alive. Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka's Philosophy of Life and the Fostering of Ecological Thing; Z. Ikere. Spirit in Flames: Toward a Postmodern-Ecological Phenomenology; D.R. White. On the