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Index
Cover Title Copyright List of Illustrations Notes on Contributors Acknowledgments 1: A Brief Introduction to Phenomenology and Existentialism
Phenomenology Existentialism The Organization of the Book Notes References and Further Reading
Part I: Phenomenology
2: Husserlian Phenomenology
Phenomenology and Twentieth-Century Thought Husserl’s “Breakthrough” to Phenomenology: Intentionality and Reflection The problem of psychologism Founding, fulfillment, and Evidenz Philosophical Implications of Phenomenology: Transcendental Idealism Horizons of Husserlian Phenomenology References and Further Reading
3: Existential Phenomenology
I Existential Phenomena II The Existential-Phenomenological Practice of Description Acknowledgments Note References and Further Reading
4: French Phenomenology
Notes References and Further Reading
5: Intentionality
Beginnings Husserl’s Theory of Intentionality Merleau-Ponty References and Further Reading
6: Consciousness
Introduction Brentano Husserl Heidegger Sartre Merleau-Ponty References and Further Reading
7: The Lifeworld and Lived Experience
Notes References and Further Reading
8: Husserl’s Reductions and the Role They Play in His Phenomenology
Some Basic Ideas of Husserl’s Phenomenology Intentionality. Noema, Noesis, Hyle Eidos. The Eidetic Reduction The Transcendental Reduction Notes References and Further Reading
9: Categorial Intuition
Notes References and Further Reading
10: Temporality
Heidegger Sartre Merleau-Ponty References and Further Reading
Part II: Existentialism
11: The Roots of Existentialism
Introduction Blaise Pascal Søren Kierkegaard Fyodor Dostoyevsky Nietzsche Notes References and Further Reading
12: German Existence-Philosophy
Notes References and Further Reading
13: Religious Existentialism
Lev Shestov (1866 –1938, Russian) Karl Barth (1886–1968, Swiss) Martin Buber (1878–1965, Austrian and Israeli) References and Further Reading
14: French Existentialism
Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Anticipations of French Existentialism Existentialist Implications of the Nineteenth-Century Emphasis upon Life: Instinct, Individuality, and Absurdity “Existence Comes Before Essence” Concreteness and Absurdity Freedom, Anxiety, and Authenticity Morality French Existentialism’s Influence Notes References and Further Reading
15: The Concept of Authenticity
Kierkegaard Heidegger Sartre References and Further Reading
16: Affectivity
Notes References and Further Reading
17: The Body
Notes References and Further Reading
18: Freedom and Responsibility
References and Further Reading
19: Absurdity
References and Further Reading
20: Death
Martin Heidegger on Being-toward-Death Jean-Paul Sartre’s Critique of Heidegger References and Further Reading
Part III: Contemporary Issues in Phenomenology AND EXISTENTIALISM
21: Emotions in Phenomenology and Existentialism
Notes References and Further Reading
22: The Egological Structure of Consciousness: Lessons from Sartre for Analytical Philosophy of Mind
Notes References and Further Reading
23: Phenomenology, Neuroscience, and Intersubjectivity
Notes References and Further Reading
24: The Intrinsic Spatial Frame of Reference
Notes References and Further Reading
25: Action, the Scientific Worldview, and Being-in-the-World
Notes References and Further Reading
26: Phenomenology in Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science
Note References and Further Reading
27: Phenomenological Currents in Twentieth-Century Psychology
References and Further Reading
28: Medicine
The Phenomenological Concept of Meaning Illness as Meaninglessness and Alienation Body, World, and Time Medicine: Practice, Science, and Technology Concluding Remarks: Being-with-Nature and Being-with-the-Other References and Further Reading
29: Realism, Science, and the Deworlding of the World
Introduction Husserl, World, and the Problem of Metaphysical Realism Heidegger and the “Worldhood of the World” Deworlding the World Phenomenology and the Nature/World Debate Note References and Further Reading
30: Environmental Philosophy
Introduction: Uncovering the Conceptual Roots of Environmental Devastation From Ontological Method to Eco-Phenomenological Ethics The Meaning of the Earth Naturalistic Ethical Realism in Eco-Phenomenology Transcendental Ethical Realism in Eco-Phenomenology Levinas, Heidegger, and the Ethical Question of Animality Notes References and Further Reading
31: Ontology, Pragmatism, and Technology
1 Preliminaries 2 Ontology and Pragmatism 3 Heidegger’s Ambiguity on Pragmatism and Technology 4 Articulating Technology References and Further Reading
32: The Lived-Body and the Dignity of Human Beings
1 Point of Departure 2 Kant’s Concept of Dignity 3 The Dignity of the Lived-Body 4 Bodily Authenticity Notes References and Further Reading
33: Sexuality
Cartesian Legacies: The Sexual Body in Existential Phenomenology Sexual Being as Becoming: Merleau-Ponty and Sexual Being Performativity as Existential Practice Queering Phenomenology from Beauvoir to Butler References and Further Reading
34: Feminism
Two Starting Points: The Living Body and the Sexual Person Sexual Difference: Phenomenological Analysis and Feminist Questions The Self and Its Other Sexual Hierarchy Later Developments References and Further Reading
35: A Life Worth Living
Notes References and Further Reading
36: The Search for Immediacy and the Problem of Political Life in Existentialism and Phenomenology
Early Existentialism Phenomenology Phenomenological Existentialism French Existentialism The Problem of the Political in Existentialism and Phenomenology References and Further Reading
37: History and Historicity
Phenomenology and the Problem of History Husserl: The “Inner History” of Europe and of Humanity Heidegger: History as Destruction and Retrieval Phenomenological and Existentialist Developments after Husserl and Heidegger References and Further Reading
38: Bubbles and Skulls: The Phenomenology of Self-Consciousness in Dutch Still-Life Painting
A Very Brief Primer on Dutch Still-Life Painting Bubbles and Skulls: Pieter Claesz and the Transformation of a Visual Theme The Temporality of Self-Consciousness in a Late Painting of David Bailly A Concluding Word about Two Portraits Notes References and Further Reading Paintings Cited
39: Mathematics
Connecting Phenomenology and Mathematics Transcendental Phenomenology as a Foundation of Mathematics Examples 1 Intuitionistic logic (Mancosu 1998; van Atten 2004b) References and Further Reading
Index
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