Phenomenology : Japanese and American perspectives

Bibliographic Information

Phenomenology : Japanese and American perspectives

edited by Burt C. Hopkins

(Contributions to phenomenology, v. 36)

Kluwer Academic, c1999

Available at  / 17 libraries

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Note

Based on research originally presented at the first meeting at Seattle University in 1991

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Many of the contributions to this volume are based on research originally presented at the historic first meeting in the United States of Japanese and American phenomenologists that took place at Seattle University in the Summer of 1991. In addition, other contributions have been added in order to supplement and complement the themes of the work presented at this meeting. Owing both to the vagaries of fate and the finitude of time, the publication of these essays has taken much longer than was originally intended. Nevertheless, this delay is more than offset by the inclusion in one volume of both phenomenological thematics and phenomenological authors who do not usually appear together.

Table of Contents

  • Part I: Phenomenology and Logic. 1. Phenomenology as Calculus? S. Nuki. 2. Is Logical Space an A Priori Framework of the Life-World? Y. Okamoto. Part II: Phenomenology of the Psyche. 3. Merleau-Ponty's Vertical Genesis and the Aristotelian Powers of the Soul
  • V. Foti. 4. The Subject in Phenomenology and Analytic (Jungian) Psychology
  • B. Hopkins. Part III: Phenomenological Self-Critique. 5. Certainty, the Fictitious Essence of Philosophy
  • S. Yuasa. 6. The Aporia of Time-Analysis - Reflection Across the Transcendental Divide
  • R. Bruzina. 7. What is Paris Doing to Us? C. Scott. 8. A Conversation with Friedrich-Wilhelm von Hermann on Heidegger's Beitrage zur Philosophie
  • P. Emad. Part IV: Phenomenology of the Imagination. 9. The Indeterminacy of Images: An Approach to a Phenomenology of the Imagination
  • J. Murata. Part V: Method and Ontology. 10. Re-Addressing Phenomenology: Heidegger's Thinking Through the Middle-Voice
  • S. Schoenbohm. 11. Question, Reflection, and Philosophical Method in Heidegger's Early Freiburg Lectures
  • S. Crowell. Part VI: Phenomenological Extensions. 12. On the Phenomenon of Questioning
  • M. Sugita. 13. Augustine as Phenomenologist: A Time Diagram
  • E. Brann. 14. Permanence and Flux
  • A. Mickunas. 15. Nihilism: Heidegger/Junger/Aristotle
  • T. Sheehan. Notes on Contributors. Index.

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