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Phenomenology and Intersubjectivity T.S. Owens

Phenomenology and Intersubjectivity By T.S. Owens

Phenomenology and Intersubjectivity by T.S. Owens


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Summary

"If you ennumerate the major problems dealt with by classical philosophy, you have knowledge, the out side world, myself, the soul and the body, the mind, God, and the future life - the problem created by association with other people never assumes 1 in classical philosophy the same importance as the other problems.

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Phenomenology and Intersubjectivity Summary

Phenomenology and Intersubjectivity: Contemporary Interpretations of the Interpersonal Situation by T.S. Owens

Dialogue and communication have today become central concepts in con temporary man's effort to analyze and comprehend the major roots of con flict that threaten our twentieth-century world. Underlying all attempts at dialogue, however, is the presupposition that it is ontologically possible for men to reach one another and to communicate meaningfully. It is to this most basic question - of the possibility and the limits of interpersonal rela tionships - that various phenomenologies of intersubjectivity direct them selves. Both the topic (intersubjectivity) and the method (phenomenology) are relative newcomers to philosophy and in a sense they arrived together. Ever since Descartes, philosophers have labored to explain how a subject knows an object. But not until the twentieth century did they begin to ask the much more fundamental and vastly more mysterious question - how does one subject encounter another subject precisely as another subject? The problem of intersubjectivity is thus one that belongs in a quite special way to contemporary philosophy. "Classical philosophy used to leave it strangely alone," says Emmanuel Mounier. "If you ennumerate the major problems dealt with by classical philosophy, you have knowledge, the out side world, myself, the soul and the body, the mind, God, and the future life - the problem created by association with other people never assumes 1 in classical philosophy the same importance as the other problems. " Phenomenology, too, is a newcomer to the philosophical scene, especially in America.

Table of Contents

Section One Jean-Paul Sartre the Phenomenology of Loneliness.- I Subjectivity in Sartre.- The Dialectical Disclosure of Being.- Being for-itself.- II The Intersubjective Dialectic.- The Existence of the Other Person.- 1. Deficiences of Realism and Idealism.- 2. Deficiences of Husserl, Hegel and Heidegger.- 3. Conditions for a Solution.- Sartre's Theory.- The Relations with Other Persons.- Section Two Max Scheler the Phenomenology of Life.- III Scheler's Concept of Person.- The Distinction of Person and Ego.- IV Critique of Previous Theories.- Conditions for a Solution.- Knowledge of the Other in General.- Two Classical Theories.- V Scheler's Theory of Intersubjectivity.- The Original Psychic Field.- The Area of "Inner Perception".- The Role of "Expression" in Perception.- The Unity-of-Life Metaphysics.- Critique of Scheler's Theory.- Section Three Dietrich von Hildebrand the Phenomenology of Love.- VI Encounter and Union Between Persons.- The Paradox of Subjectivity.- Essential Types of Encounter.- Basic Types of Union.- VII The Eidos of Love.- The Eidetic Structure of Love.- Value as Bonding Medium.

Additional information

CIN9024750237G
9789024750238
9024750237
Phenomenology and Intersubjectivity: Contemporary Interpretations of the Interpersonal Situation by T.S. Owens
Used - Good
Paperback
Springer
1971-07-01
164
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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