En este mes de septiembre de 2011, la editorial académica Routledge publicará el volumen: "The Routledge Companion to Phenomenology" editado por Sebastian Luft & Soren Overgaard. Un completo "companion" acerca de la fenomenología (de 720 págs.) dividido en 5 grandes secciones sobre las figuras principales de la fenomenología (de F. Brentano a J. Derrida), temas fundamentales ("Intencionalidad", "Reducción", "Mundo", etc.), contribuciones de la fenomenología (a la metafísica, la lógica, la ética, etc.), intersecciones con otras corrientes filosóficas y científicas y, finalmente, una suerte de epílogo histórico. Entre los investigadores que participan en este volumen colectivo se encuentran: R. Walton, D. Lohmar, F. Dastur o G. Figal.
"Phenomenology was one of the twentieth century’s major philosophical movements and continues to be a vibrant and widely studied subject today. The Routledge Companion to Phenomenology is an outstanding guide and reference source to the key philosophers, topics and themes in this exciting subject and essential reading for any student and scholar of phenomenology."Close attention is paid to the core topics in phenomenology such as intentionality, perception, subjectivity, the self, the body, being and phenomenological method. An important feature of the Companion is its examination of how phenomenology has contributed to central disciplines in philosophy such as metaphysics, philosophy of mind, moral philosophy, aesthetics and philosophy of religion as well as disciplines beyond philosophy such as race, cognitive science, psychiatry, literary criticism and psychoanalysis."
Index:IntroductionPart 1: Main Figures in the Phenomenological Movement1. Franz Brentano, Peter Simons2. Edmund Husserl, Dermot Moran3. Max Scheler, Eugene Kelly4. Martin Heidegger, Daniel Dahlstrom5. Jean-Paul Sartre, Roland Breeur6. Emmanuel Levinas, Richard Cohen7. Hannah Arendt, Veronica Vasterling8. Simone de Beauvoir, Gail Weiss9. Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Komarine Romdenh-Romluc10. Jacques Derrida, Björn ThorsteinssonPart 2: Main Topics in Phenomenology11. Intentionality, John J. Drummond12. Evidence, Roberto Walton13. Perception, Walter Hopp14. Truth, Thane M. Naberhaus15. The Subject and the Self, Karl Mertens16. Intersubjectivity, Dan Zahavi17. Time, Nicolas de Warren18. Space, Edward S. Casey19. The World, Carleton B. Christensen20. The Body, Sara Heinämaa21. History, David Carr22. Husserl’s Method of Reduction, Sebastian Luft23. Eidetics and its Methodology, Rochus Sowa24. Genetic Phenomenology, Dieter Lohmar25. Research Methods in Phenomenology after Husserl, David R. Cerbone26. Art and Aesthetics, John Brough27. Value, Peter Poellner28. The Meaning of Being, Thomas Schwarz Wentzer29. Dasein, Françoise Dastur30. Freedom, Jonathan Webber31. The Chiasm, Ted Toadvine32. Ethics as First Philosophy, Bettina Bergo33. Narrative, Pol VandeveldePart 3: Phenomenological Contributions to Philosophy34. Metaphysics and Ontology, Martin Schwab and David Woodruff-Smith35. Epistemology, Gianfranco Soldati36. Philosophy of Mind, Charles Siewert37. Philosophy of Language, Christian Beyer and Martin Weichold38. Moral Philosophy, Sonja Rinofner-Kreidl39. Political Philosophy, James Dodd40. Logic, Richard Tieszen41. Philosophy of Mathematics, Mirja Hartimo and Leila Haaparanta42. Philosophy of Science, Jeff Kochan and Hans Bernhard Schmid43. Philosophy of Religion and Theology, Felix Ó MurchadhaPart 4: Phenomenological Intersections44. Existentialism, Jack Reynolds45. Hermeneutics, Günter Figal and David Espinet46. Deconstruction, Leonard Lawlor47. Feminism, Helen A. Fielding48. Post-Structuralism: Michel Foucault, Johanna Oksala49. Critical Theory, Ernst Wolff50. Critical Philosophy of Race, Robert Bernasconi51. Analytic Philosophy, Søren Overgaard52. Cognitive Science, Shaun Gallagher53. Phenomenological Psychology, James Morley54. Psychoanalysis, Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar55. Psychiatry, Thomas Fuchs56. Nursing and Medicine, Havi Carel57. The Social Sciences, Michael Barber58. Literary Criticism, Joshua KatesPart 5: Historical Postscript59. "Phenomenology": A Reflection on the History of the Term, Karl Schuhmann
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