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Index
Cover
Dedication
Title page
Copyright page
Acknowledgments
Introduction
What you will not find in this book
Phenomenology now
Why study phenomenology?
Overview
1: Kant and Wundt: Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Background
1.1 Kant's critical philosophy
1.2 Wilhelm Wundt and the rise of scientific psychology
Key terms
Further reading
2: Edmund Husserl and Transcendental Phenomenology
2.1 Transcendental phenomenology
2.2 Brentano
2.3 Between logic and psychology
2.4 Ideas
2.5 Phenomenology of time consciousness
Key terms
Further reading
3: Martin Heidegger and Existential Phenomenology
3.1 The intelligibility of the everyday world
3.2 Descartes and occurrentness
3.3 Being-in-the-world
3.4 Being-with others and the anyone
3.5 The existential conception of the self
3.6 Death, guilt, and authenticity
Key terms
Further reading
4: Gestalt Psychology
4.1 Gestalt criticisms of atomistic psychology
4.2 Perception and the environment
4.3 Influence of Gestalt psychology
Key terms
Further reading
5: Maurice Merleau-Ponty: The Body and Perception
5.1 Phenomenology of Perception
5.2 Phenomenology, psychology, and the phenomenal field
5.3 The lived body
5.4 Perceptual constancy and natural objects
Key terms
Further reading
6: Jean-Paul Sartre: Phenomenological Existentialism
6.1 Sartre's ontology of the self
6.2 Anguish, the pre-reflective self, and bad faith
6.3 Sartre on the body and perception
6.4 Other phenomenologies: Beauvoir, Young and Alcoff
Key terms
Further reading
7: James J. Gibson and Ecological Psychology
7.1 William James, functionalism, and radical empiricism
7.2 Gibson's early work: Two examples
7.3 The ecological approach
7.4 Ecological ontology
7.5 Affordances and invitations
Key terms
Further reading
8: Hubert Dreyfus and the Phenomenological Critique of Cognitivism
8.1 The cognitive revolution and cognitive science
8.2 “Alchemy and artificial intelligence”
8.3 What Computers Can't Do
8.4 Heideggerian artificial intelligence
Key terms
Further reading
9: Phenomenological Cognitive Science
9.1 The frame problem
9.2 Radical embodied cognitive science
9.3 Dynamical systems theory
9.4 Heideggerian cognitive science
9.5 Enactivism
9.6 The sensorimotor approach
9.7 The future of scientific phenomenology
Key terms
Further reading
References
Index
End User License Agreement
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