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Belief and its neutralization : Husserl's system of phenomenology in Ideas I / Marcus Brainard.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Brainard, Marcus.
- Series:
- SUNY series in constructive postmodern thought
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Phenomenology.
- Husserl, Edmund, 1859-1938. Allgemeine Einführung in die reine Phänomenologie.
- Husserl, Edmund.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (353 p.)
- Place of Publication:
- Albany : State University of New York Press, c2002.
- Language Note:
- English
- Summary:
- The definitive commentary on Husserl's Ideas I.
- Contents:
- Intro
- Belief and its Neutralization
- Contents
- Preface
- I. Introduction The Task of Thinking
- 1. The Idea of Phenomenology
- 1.1 The Crisis, its Source and Dimensions
- 1.2 Natural Order and Critique
- 1.3 System and Norms
- 1.4 Ethos, Ought, Teleology
- 2. The System of Husserlian Phenomenology: Ideas I
- 2.1 Polarities
- 2.2 The Order of Critique
- 2.3 The Whole and its Parts
- II. Phenomenological Propaedeutics
- 1. Logical Considerations: Fact and Essence
- 1.1 The Realm of the Natural
- 1.2 Individual and Essence, Possibility and Necessity
- 1.3 Factual and Eidetic Sciences
- 2. Between Scylla and Charybdis: The Principle of All Principles
- 2.1 Phenomenology and Philosophy
- 2.2 Empiricism, Naturalism, Skepticism
- 2.3 Idealism
- 2.4 The Blindness of Theory
- 2.5 The First Principle
- 2.6 Dogmatism
- 3. The Epoché and the Phenomenological Reductions
- 3.1 The Attitudes of Consciousness
- 3.2 The General Thesis
- 3.3 The Instrumentalization of Cartesian Doubt
- 3.4 The Attitudinal Leap
- 3.5 The Family of Reductions
- 3.6 The Primacy of the Universal Epoché
- 4. The Field of Phenomenological Inquiry: Pure Consciousness
- 4.1 The Phenomenological Residuum
- 4.2 The Modifiability of Consciousness I: Actionality and Inactionality
- 4.3 The Modifiability of Consciousness II: Intentionality
- 4.4 Immanent and Transcendent Perception
- 4.5 Consciousness and the Natural World
- 4.6 Merely Phenomenal and Absolute Being
- 4.7 The Destruction of Transcendence
- 4.8 The Annihilation of the World
- 4.9 From the Natural to the Phenomenological Sphere
- III. The Disclosure of the System's Lowermost Limit: Subjectivity
- 1. The Science of Pure Phenomenology
- 1.1 The First Negative Account: Phenomenological Method and its Dissenters
- 1.2 The First Positive Account: The Aim and Method of Phenomenology.
- 1.3 The Second Negative and Positive Accounts: Intuition and First Science
- 2. First Categories: The Archimedean Point and its Other
- 2.1 Phenomenology as Rigorous Science
- 2.2 The Pure Ego and its Lived Experiences
- 2.3 Intentionality and Constitution
- 3. The Noetic-Noematic Correlation: Towards the Basis of Conscious Life
- 3.1 The Functionality of Intentional Reference
- 3.2 The Discovery of the Noema
- 3.3 The Modifiability of Consciousness
- 3.4 Belief- and Being-Characteristics
- 4. The Doctrine of the Neutrality Modification
- 4.1 The Epoché and the Neutrality Modification
- 4.2 Neutrality and Reason
- 4.3 Supposing and Neutrality
- 4.4 Fantasy and the Neutrality Modification
- 4.5 Fantasy, Aesthetic Consciousness, and the Neutrality Modification
- 4.6 The Abyss between Positional and Neutral Consciousness
- 4.7 The Levels of Consciousness
- 4.8 Detours and Direct Routes: The Universality of the Neutrality Modification
- 4.9 The Transition to the Logical and its Obstruction
- 5. The Realm of Logos
- 5.1 Higher Level Features of Consciousness: Synthetic Consciousness
- 5.2 Positional and Neutral Syntheses
- 5.3 The Expression of Syntheses
- 5.4 The Directions of Synthesis
- 5.5 The Logical Strata
- 5.6 Expression, Judgment, Belief
- IV. Towards the System's Uppermost Limit: Reason
- 1. The Referentiality of the Noema
- 2. The Verdict of Reason
- 2.1 The Nature of Reason
- 2.2 Forms of Rational Consciousness and Evidence
- 2.3 Hierarchies of Belief, Reason, Evidence, and Truth
- 2.4 The Animating Force of the Originary, Immediate, Direct
- 2.5 Being and Thinking
- 2.6 The Prescriptive Function of Essence
- 2.7 Belief and Normativity
- 2.8 Phenomenology and the Acquisition of the World
- 3. Towards Absolute Reason
- V. Conclusion: The Phenomenological Movement
- Postscript
- Notes
- Preface.
- I. Introduction: The Task Of Thinking
- V. The Phenomenological Movement
- Bibliography
- Index of Names
- A
- B
- C
- D
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- R
- S
- V
- W
- Y.
- Notes:
- Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
- Includes bibliographical references (p. 307-328) and index.
- ISBN:
- 9780791489307
- 0791489302
- 9780585476209
- 0585476209
- OCLC:
- 53226146
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