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Phenomenology of intersubjectivity : Husserl, Levinas, and East-West Dialogue / Nam-In Lee.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Yi, Nam-in, 1958- author.
- Series:
- Phänomenologische Forschungen. Beiheft ; 6.
- Phänomenologische Forschungen, Beiheft ; 6
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Husserl, Edmund, 1859-1938.
- Husserl, Edmund.
- Buber, Martin, 1878-1965.
- Buber, Martin.
- Intersubjectivity.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (342 pages)
- Place of Publication:
- Hamburg : Felix Meiner Verlag, [2022]
- Summary:
- Dieser Band beleuchtet die mannigfaltigen Aspekte von Intersubjektivität und bringt verschiedene Philosophen miteinander in einen fachlichen Dialog. Der Autor setzt sich mit den verschiedenen Ebenen und Dimensionen von Husserls Phänomenologie der Intersubjektivität auseinander und vergleicht diese mit Ideen von Scheler, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Schutz, Buber und Habermas. Einen direkten Bezug stellt Nam-in Lee zwischen den Positionen von Husserl und Levinas zur Phänomenologie der Intersubjektivität her und bringt sie in einen fruchtbaren Austausch miteinander.Darüber hinaus regt der Band auch einen interkulturellen philosophischen Dialog zwischen Philosophen an, deren Denken vorrangig westlich beziehungsweise fernöstlich geprägt ist, wie etwa Husserl und Konfuzius, Scheler und Mencius oder Hutcheson und Chong Yak-Yong.
- Contents:
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Husserl's Phenomenology as the Starting Point for the Exploration of Intersubjectivity
- 2. Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Husserl
- 3. Husserl and the Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Levinas
- 4. Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity and the Dialogue between East and West
- PART I : Problems of Intersubjectivity in Husserl
- Chapter 1: Static Phenomenology and Genetic Phenomenology
- 1. Various Views on the Distinction Between Static and Genetic Phenomenology
- 2. Assessment of the View of Static Phenomenology as a Pre-Stage of Genetic Phenomenology
- 3. Static Phenomenology as the Phenomenology of Validity-Foundation and Genetic Phenomenology as the Phenomenology of Genetic Foundation
- 4. Static Phenomenology as a Phenomenology of Justification and Genetic Phenomenology as a Concrete Phenomenology
- 5. Two Dimensions of Static and Genetic Phenomenology
- Chapter 2: Static-Phenomenological and Genetic-Phenomenological Concepts of Primordiality in Husserl's Fifth Cartesian Meditation
- 1. Ambiguities of the Concept of Primordiality in the Fifth Cartesian Meditation
- 2. The Primordial Reduction and the Primordial Sphere
- 3. The Static-Phenomenological Concept of Primordiality
- 4. The Genetic-Phenomenological Concept of Primordiality
- 5. Relations Among the Ambiguities of Primordiality
- 6. Ambiguities of Primordiality and the Basic Character of the Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in the Fifth Cartesian Meditation
- Chapter 3: Various Fields of the Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity and the Relationship Between Husserl and Buber
- 1. Criticisms of Husserl's Phenomenology of Intersubjectivityby the Philosophy of Dialogue
- 2. The Ontological Problem of Intersubjectivity
- 3. The Transcendental Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity and the Problem of Motivation.
- 4. The Structure of the Analogical Experience of the Other
- 5. The Static Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity
- 6. The Genetic Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity
- 7. The Metaphysical Problem of Intersubjectivity
- 8. Buberian Criticism of Husserl's Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity Reassessed
- Chapter 4: Genetic Phenomenology and Problems of Intersubjectivity
- 1. Clarification of the Genetic Process of Operation of the Habitual System of the Experience of the Other
- 1.1 Non-Objectifying Intentionalities as Genetic-Phenomenological Motivations of the Analogical Experience of the Other
- 1.2 The Experience of the World as the Genetic Foundation of the Experience of the Other
- 1.3 Horizons of the Genetic Phenomenology of the Various Kinds ofExperience of Others
- 2. Clarification of the Genesis of the Habitual System of the Experience of the Other
- 3. Clarification of the Constitution of Society and the Process of Its Transformation
- 4. Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Husserl and Scheler
- 5. Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Husserl and Heidegger
- 6. Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Husserl and Merleau-Ponty
- 7. Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Husserl and Schutz
- 8. Husserl's Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity and Habermas's Philosophy of Intersubjectivity
- 9. Criticism of Husserl's Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity as Cartesianism
- 10. Concluding Remarks
- PART II: Husserl and Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Levinas
- Chapter 5: Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity in Husserl and Levinas
- 1. Levinas's Criticism of Husserl's Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity
- 2. Husserl's Ontological Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity and Levinas's Phenomenology of the Face
- 3. Transcendental Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity and Phenomenology of the Face.
- 4. Toward a Phenomenological Dialogue Between Husserl and Levinas
- Chapter 6: Phenomenology of Sensible Life in Husserl and Levinas
- 1. Phenomenology of Sensible Life in Levinas's Phenomenology of the Face
- 2. Phenomenology of Sensible Life in Husserl's Genetic Phenomenology
- 3. Comparison of the Phenomenology of Sensible Life in Husserl and Levinas
- Chapter 7: Experience and Evidence
- 1. Levinas's Criticism of Husserl's Concept of Evidence
- 2. Husserl's Concept of Experience
- 2.1 The Narrowest Concept of Experience as the Original Experience of an Empirical Individual
- 2.2 A Broader Concept of Experience
- 2.3 Natural Experience and Transcendental Experience
- 2.4 The Broadest Concept of Experience: Original and Non-Original Experience
- 3. Evidence as Original Experience
- 4. Assessment of Levinas's Criticism of Husserl's Concept of Evidence (1): Initial Considerations
- 5. Assessment of Levinas's Criticism of Husserl's Concept of Evidence (2): Transcendental Experience and Evidence
- 6. Assessment of Levinas's Criticism of Husserl's Concept of Evidence (3): Absolute Experience and Evidence
- 7. Concluding Remarks
- Chapter 8: Phenomenology of Exteriority Beyond Linguistic Idealism
- 1. Levinas's Phenomenology of the Face and Linguistic Idealism
- 2. Three Possibilities of the Relationship Between World and Objects in Genetic Constitution
- 3. A Dialogical Relationship Between World and Objects in Genetic Constitution
- 4. The Conflict of the Individual Object with the World and the Genetic-Phenomenological Concept of Exteriority
- 5. Exteriority in the Genetic-Phenomenological Sense and the Limitations of Levinas's Phenomenology of Exteriority as Linguistic Idealism
- 6. The Concept of Event in Genetic Phenomenology, Heidegger, and Levinas
- 7. Concluding Remarks.
- PART III: Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity and East-West Dialogue
- Chapter 9: Ethics of Renewal in Husserl and Confucius
- 1. The Ethics of Renewal in Husserl
- 1.1 The Overview of One's Life
- 1.2 Ethical Evaluation
- 1.3 Ethical Striving
- 1.4 Ethical Resolution
- 1.5 The Repetition of the Ethical Renewal
- 1.6 The Highest Good and the Categorical Imperative
- 1.7 Reason
- 1.8 The Life of Satisfaction
- 1.9 From Individual to Social Ethical Renewal
- 2. The Ethics of Renewal in Confucius
- 2.1 The Ethics of Renewal in the Analects
- 2.2 The Ethics of Renewal in the Text of Confucius in the Great Learning
- 2.3 The Ethics of Renewal in Chapter 2 of the Commentary by the Philosopher Tsãng
- 3. Various Dimensions of the Ethics of Renewal
- 4. Promoting a Dialogue Between the Ethics of Renewal in Husserl and Confucius
- 5. The Intersubjective Aspect of Ethical Renewal
- 6. Future Tasks of the Ethics of Renewal
- Chapter 10: Feeling as the Origin of Value in Scheler and Mencius
- 1. Scheler's View on Feeling as the Origin of Value
- 2. Mencius's View on Feeling as the Origin of Value
- 3. Phenomenological Dialogue Between Scheler and Mencius
- 3.1 Lessons from Scheler to Mencius
- 3.2 Lessons from Mencius to Scheler
- 4. The Intersubjective Aspect of Moral Feeling
- 5. Concluding Remarks
- Chapter 11: Moral Instinct in Hutcheson and Chong Yak-Yong
- 1. The Concept of Instinct
- 2. The Theory of Moral Instinct in Hutcheson
- 3. The Theory of Moral Instinct in Chong Yak-Yong
- 4. The Relationship of Motivation Between Moral Instinct and Moral Feeling Reconsidered
- 5. The Intersubjective Aspect of the Moral Instinct
- Works Cited and Consulted
- Acknowledgments
- Index.
- Notes:
- Description based upon print version of record.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on print version record.
- Other Format:
- Print version: Lee, Nam-In Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity
- ISBN:
- 9783787342068
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