1st Edition

Phenomenology Responses and Developments

By Leonard Lawlor Copyright 2014
    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    After Husserl, the study of phenomenology took off in different directions. The ambiguity inherent in phenomenology - between conscious experience and structural conditions - lent itself to a range of interpretations. Many existentialists developed phenomenology as conscious experience to analyse ethics and religion. Other phenomenologists developed notions of structural conditions to explore questions of science, mathematics, and conceptualization. "Phenomenology: Responses and Developments" covers all the major innovators in phenomenology - notably Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, and the later Heidegger - and the major schools and issues. The volume also shows how phenomenological thinking encounters a limit, a limit most apparent in the aesthetical and hermeneutical development of phenomenology. The volume closes with an examination of the furthering of the division between analytic and continental philosophy.

    Series Preface; Introduction, Leonard Lawlor; 1. Dialectic, difference and the Other: the Hegelianizing of French phenomenology, John Russon; 2. Existentialism, S. K. Keltner & Samuel J. Julian; 3. Sartre and phenomenology, William L. McBride; 4. Continental aesthetics: phenomenology and antiphenomenology, Galen A. Johnson; 5. Merleau-Ponty at the limits of phenomenology, Mauro Carbone; 6. The hermeneutic transformation of phenomenology, Daniel L. Tate; 7. The later Heidegger, Dennis J. Schmidt; 8. Existential theology, Andreas Grossmann; 9. Religion and ethics, Felix O Murchadha; 10. The philosophy of the concept, Pierre Cassou-Nogues; 11. Analytic philosophy and continental philosophy: four confrontations, Dermot Moran

    Biography

    Leonard Lawlor