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Imperial Library
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  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Introduction: Phenomenological Discoveries Concerning the ‘We’: Mapping the Terrain
  • Part I Historical and Methodological Issues
    • 1 Locating Shared Life in the ‘Thou’: Some Historical and Thematic Considerations
    • 2 Hannah Arendt’s Conception of Actualized Plurality
    • 3 Habermas and Hermeneutics: From Verstehen to Lebenswelt
    • 4 Second-Person Phenomenology
  • Part II Intersubjectivity, the “We-World,” and Objectivity
    • 5 Concrete Interpersonal Encounters or Sharing a Common World: Which Is More Fundamental in Phenomenological Approaches to Sociality?
    • 6 Ineinandersein and L’interlacs: The Constitution of the Social World or “We-World” (Wir-Welt) in Edmund Husserl and Maurice Merleau-Ponty
    • 7 Davidson and Husserl on the Social Origin of Our Concept of Objectivity
  • Part III Social Cognition, Embodiment, and Social Emotions
    • 8 From Types to Tokens: Empathy and Typification
    • 9 An Interactionist Approach to Shared Cognition: Some Prospects and Challenges
    • 10 “If I had to live like you, I think I’d kill myself”: Social Dimensions of the Experience of Illness
    • 11 Shame as a Fellow Feeling
    • 12 Relating to the Dead: Social Cognition and the Phenomenology of Grief
  • Part IV Collective Intentionality and Affectivity
    • 13 Affective Intentionality: Early Phenomenological Contributions to a New Phenomenological Sociology
    • 14 Love and Other Social Stances in Early Phenomenology
    • 15 Gurwitsch and the Role of Emotion in Collective Intentionality
    • 16 The Affective ‘We’: Self-Regulation and Shared Emotions
  • Part V Collective Agency and Group Personhood
    • 17 Husserl on Groupings: Social Ontology and the Phenomenology of We-Intentionality
    • 18 Collectivizing Persons and Personifying Collectives: Reassessing Scheler on Group Personhood
    • 19 Brothers in Arms: Fraternity-Terror in Sartre’s Social Ontology
  • Contributors
  • Index
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