1st Edition

The Routledge Handbook of Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy

840 Pages
by Routledge

840 Pages
by Routledge

840 Pages
by Routledge

Phenomenology was one of the twentieth century’s major philosophical movements, and it continues to be a vibrant and widely studied subject today with relevance beyond philosophy in areas such as medicine and cognitive sciences. The Routledge Handbook of Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy is an outstanding guide to this important and fascinating topic. Its focus on phenomenology’s... Read more

Introduction D. De Santis, B. Hopkins and C. Majolino

Part 1: Phenomenology and the History of Philosophy

1. The History of the Phenomenological Movement P.-J. Renaudie

2. Phenomenology and Greek Philosophy B. Hopkins

3. Phenomenology and Medieval Philosophy F. V. Tommasi

4. Phenomenology and the Cartesian Tradition E. Mehl

5. Phenomenology and British Empiricism V. De Palma

6. Phenomenology and German Idealism Th. Seebohm

7. Phenomenology and Austrian Philosophy C. Ierna

Part 2: Issues and Concepts in Phenomenology

8. Aesthetics and Art F. Vassiliou

9. Body M. Doyon, M. Wehrle

10. Consciousness W. Hopp

11. Crisis E. Trizio

12. Dasein D. Dahlstrom

13. Ego M. Shim

14. Eidetic Method D. De Santis

15. Ethics J. Drummond

16. Existence E. Mariani

17. Genesis P. Alves

18. Horizon S. Geniusas

19. Imagination and Fantasy J. Jansen

20. Instinct Nam-In Lee

21. Intentionality B. Hopkins

22. Intersubjectivity and Sociality J. Čapek, T. Matějčková

23. Life-World L. Perreau

24. Mathematics V. Gérard

25. Monad A. Altobrando

26. Mood and Emotions O. Švec

27. Nothingness K.-Y. Lau

28. Ontology, Metaphysics, First Philosophy V. Gérard

29. Perception W. Hopp

30. Phenomenon A. Dijan and C. Majolino

31. Reduction A. Staiti

32. Synthesis J. Rump

33. Transcendental J. Dodd

34. Theory of Knowledge E. Trizio

35. Time N. De Warren

36. Truth and Evidence G. Heffernan

37. Variation D. De Santis

38. World K. Novotný

Part 3: Major Figures in Phenomenology

39. Hannah Arendt S. Loidolt

40. Simone de Beauvoir Ch. Daigle

41. Franz Brentano A. Chrudzimski

42. Eugen Fink R. Lazzari

43. Aron Gurwitsch M. Barber and O. Wiegand

44. Martin Heidegger D. Dahlstrom

45. Michel Henry P. Lorelle

46. Edmund Husserl B. Hopkins

47. Roman Ingarden G. Bacigalupo

48. Jacob Klein B. Hopkins

49. Ludwig Landgrebe I. Quepons

50. Emmanuel LevinasR. Moati

51. Maurice Merleau-Ponty P. Burke

52. Enzo Paci M. Ferri

53. Jan Patočka R. Paparusso

54. Adolf Reinach M. Tedeschini

55. Jean-Paul Sartre N. Masselot

56. Max Scheler P. Theodorou

57. Alfred Schutz M. Barber

58. Edith Stein A. Calcagno

59. Trân Duc Thao J. Melançon

Part 4: Intersections

60. Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy G. Fréchette

61. Phenomenology and Cognitive Sciences J. Yoshimi

62. Phenomenology and Critical Theory A. Procyshyn

63. Phenomenology and Deconstruction M. Senatore

64. Phenomenology and Hermeneutics J. Risser

65. Phenomenology and Medicine V. Bizzarri

66. Phenomenology and Philosophy of Science E. Trizio

67. Phenomenology and Political Theory E. Jolly

68. Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis P. Giampieri-Deutsch

69. Phenomenology and Religion S. Bancalari

70. Phenomenology and Structuralism K.-Y. Lau

Part 5: Phenomenology in the World

71. Africa B. Ndoye

72. Australia and New Zealand E. Copelj and J. Reynolds

73. Eastern Asia S. Ebersolt, T.-h. Kim and C.-s. Han

74. Latin America R. Rizo-Patron

75. North America S. Crowell and R. Parker

Appendix

76. Family Tree C. Ierna.

Index

Biography

Daniele De Santis is Assistant Professor at Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.

Burt C. Hopkins is Associate Research Fellow (UMR-CNRS 8163 STL), Lille, France.

Claudio Majolino is Associate Professor at the University of Lille (UMR-CNRS 8163 STL), France.

"This volume arguably represents the most ambitious and complete attempt until today to collect in a uniform form a series of highly qualified contributions on the entire spectrum of phenomenological philosophy. Given the peculiar character of each entry of this Handbook, it will be no surprise if the text will be taken as a useful guide by students entering for the first time in the difficult terrain of phenomenology as well as by experienced scholars." - Gabriele Baratelli, Phenomenological Reviews