1st Edition

Phenomenology Critical Concepts in Philosophy

    2008 Pages
    by Routledge

    Phenomenology as a tradition owes its name to Edmund Husserl, in his Logical Investigations (1900-1). It began as a bold new way of doing philosophy, an attempt to bring it back from abstract metaphysical speculation and empty logical calculation in order to come into contact with concrete living experience. As formulated by Husserl, Phenomenology is the investigation of the structures of consciousness that enable consciousness to refer to objects outside itself. It soon broadened into a world-wide and now century-old tradition.
    Phenomenological versions of theology, sociology, psychology, psychiatry and literary criticism, have all been engendered, so that phenomenology remains one of the most important traditions of contemporary philosophy. Phenomenology is currently extending into new areas such as gender, ethnicity, multiculturalism, and ecology. An effort has been made in these four volumes to include representatives of all the major tendencies within phenomenology and to provide documentation of the critical discussion of its central topics.
    Forthcoming titles in this series include Pragmatism (2005, c.4 Volumes, c.£495), Free Will (2005, c.4 Volumes, c.£495) and Aesthetics (2005, c.4 Volumes, c.£495)

    Volume I: Phenomenology: Central Tendencies and Concepts (Intentionality, Evidence, Epoche and Reduction, Constitution, Lifeworld, Horizon)
    Volume II: Major Issues in Phenomenology (Perception, Space, and Time; Others; Intersubjectivity; the Body; Emotion; New Areas - technology, Ecology, Ethnicity, Gender)
    Volume III: Philosophical Disciplines within Phenomenology (Philosophy of the Sciences, Aesthetics and Value Theory, Ethics, Philosophy of Religion)
    Volume IV: Assessments of Phenomenologists by Phenomenologists (Ingarden, Fink, Landgrebe, Merleau-Ponty, Schutz, Gurwitsch, Sartre, Levinas, Derrida, Taminiaux, Dreyfus)