PHENOMENOLOGY WORLD-WIDE
Foundations -- Expanding Dynamisms -- Life Engagements
A Guide for Research and Study
Table of Contents
Preface
INTRODUCTION:
PHENOMENOLOGY AS THE INSPIRATIONAL FORCE OF OUR
TIMES: ITS SEMINAL INTUITIONS AND DYNAMIC
By Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, World Phenomenology Institute, USA
PART ONE: LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS OF PHENOMENOLOGY
1) The Nascent Phase
FRANZ BRENTANO, THE GRANDFATHER OF PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE
SPIRIT OF THE TIMES
By Mauro Antonelli, University of Bologna, Italy
THE GENERATIVE PRINCIPLES OF PHENOMENOLOGY, THEIR GENESIS, DEVELOPMENT AND EARLY EXPANSION
By Angela Ales Bello, Italian Phenomenology Center, Rome, Italy
PERSONAL IDENTITY AND THE DEPTH OF THE PERSON, HUSSERL AND THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL CIRCLES OF MUNICH AND GOTTINGEN
By Roberta de Monticelli, University of Geneva, Switzerland
JEAN HERING AND EARLY PHENOMENOLOGICAL ONTOLOGY
By Jacek Surzyn, Slask University, Sosnowiec, Poland
2) Laying the Foundations of Phenomenology
ON HUSSERL'S MATHEMATICAL APPRENTICESHIP AND PHILOSOPHY OF MATHEMATICS
By Claire Ortiz Hill, Paris, France
THE QUESTION OF GRAMMAR IN LOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO BRENTANO, MARTY, BOLZANO AND LATER DEVELOPMENTS IN LOGIC
By Jocelyn Benoist, Universite de Paris I
HUSSERL AND BOLZANO
By Jocelyn Benoist, University of Paris I, France
HUSSERL'S CONCEPT OF PURE LOGICAL GRAMMAR
By Luis Flores H., Pontifical Catholic University of Chile
EPOCHE: MEANING, OBJECT, AND EXISTENCE IN HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY
By Oded Balaban, University of Haifa, Israel
HUSSERL'S NOTION OF THE NATURAL ATTITUDE AND THE SHIFT TO TRANSCENDENTAL PHENOMENOLOGY
By Sebastion Luft, Catholic University, Leuven, Belgium
PASSIVITY AS PRE-PREDICATIVE CONSTITUTION IN HUSSERL: STRUCTURE AND DISCUSSION
By Rolf Kuhn and Michael Staudigl, University of Vienna, Austria
FATHOMING THE ABYSS OF TIME: TEMPORALITY AND INTENTIONALITY IN HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY
By Sonja Rinofner-Kreidl, Karl Franz University, Graz, Austria
THE ROLE OF INTERSUBJECTIVITY AND EMPATHY IN HUSSERL'S FOUNDATIONAL PROJECT
By Kathleen Haney, University of Houston, United States
THE CONCEPT OF LEBENSWELT FROM PHILOSOPHY OF ARITHMETIC TO CRISIS
By Bianca Maria d'Ippolito, University of Naples, Italy
3) The Efflorescence of Phenomenology: Its Classical Representatives
MAX SCHELER AND ETHOS: THE HUMAN BEING IN ACTION AND IN THE COSMOS
By Manfred S. Frings, Editor of Scheler's Nachlass
THE PHILOSOPHY OF ROMAN INGARDEN
By Zofia Majewska, University Marie Curie-Skoldowska, Lublin, Poland
DANUTA GIERULANKA, PHENOMENOLOGY OF MATHEMATICS
By Maria Bielawka, Academia Gorniczo-Hutmicza, Krakow, Poland
ROMAN INGARDEN'S UNIQUE CONCEPTION OF AESTHETIC OBJECTS
By Victor Kocay, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada
HEDWIG CONRAD-MARTIUS AND THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF NATURE
By Angela Ales Bello, Italian Phenomenology Center, Rome, Italy
EDITH STEIN'S CONTRIBUTION TO PHENOMENOLOGY
By Angela Ales Bello, Italian Phenomenology Center, Rome, Italy
HEIDEGGER'S PHENOMENOLOGY OF BEING AND HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY OF CONSCIOUSNESS
By Jiro Watanabe, University of Tokyo, Japan
PART TWO: EXPANDING HORIZONS
1) Reception: Interpretation, Assimilation and Elaboration around the
World after the Second World War
GERMAN PHENOMENOLOGY FROM LANDGREBE TO WALDENFELS
By Gabriella Baptist, University of Naples, Italy
THE DEVELOPMENT OF PHENOMENOLOGY IN BELGIUM AND THE NETHERLANDS
By Antonio Mazzu, University of Brussels, Belgium
PHENOMENOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE NETHERLANDS AND FLANDERS
By Bas Levering and Max van Manen, University of Alberta, Canada
PHENOMENOLOGY IN NORTH AMERICA AND ‘CONTINENTAL’ PHILOSOPHY
By Robert Sweeney, John Carroll University, United States
ITALIAN PHENOMENOLOGY IN THE WORLD FORUM
Patrizia Manganoro, Lateran University, Rome, Italy
PHENOMENOLOGY IN THE CROSS-CULTURAL DIALOGUE WITH ORIENTAL PHILOSOPHY
By Robert J. Wise, Jr., World Phenomenology Institute, Hanover, Hew Hampshire, United States
JAN PATOCKA AND PHENOMENOLOGY IN BOHEMIA AND SLOVAKIA
By Josef Sivak, Academy of Science, Bratislava, Slovakia
PHENOMENOLOGICAL THINKING IN TWENTIETH CENTURY GEORGIAN PHILOSOPHY: KOTE BOKRADZE, MERAB MAMARDASHVILI, ZURAB KAKABADZE
By Mamuka Dolidze, Institute of Philosophy of Georgia, Tblisi, Georgia
TEODOR CELMS, KURT STAVENHAGEN AND PHENOMENOLOGY IN LATVIA
By Ella Buceniece, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
PHENOMENOLOGY IN INDIA
By Debabrata Sinha, Brock University, St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada
PHENOMENOLOGY AND ISLAMIC PHILOSOPHY
By Hassan Hanafi, Cairo University, Egypt
2) Further Inspirations and Probings, New Beginnings and Developments
JEAN-PAUL SARTRE, A PROFOUND REVISION OF HUSSERLIAN PHENOMENOLOGY
By Yvanka B. Raynova, Institute for Axiological Research, Vienna, Austria
SARTRE'S EARLY PHENOMENOLOGY OF AUTHENTICITY IN RELATION TO HUSSERL
By Jacob Golomb, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
MAURICE MERLEAU-PONTY, PHILOSOPHY AS PHENOMENOLOGY
By Patrick Bourgeois, Loyola University, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
HANS-GEORG GADAMER, PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE HERMENEUTIC TURN
By Osvaldo Rossi, University of Trento, Italy
PAUL RICOEUR AND HERMENEUTIC PHENOMENOLOGY
By Domenico Jervolino, University of Naples, Italy
PHENOMENOLOGY IN ORTEGA AND IN ZUBIRI
Jesus Conill, University of Valencia, Spain
EMMANUEL LEVINAS: THE ETHICS OF "FACE TO FACE" / THE RELIGIOUS TURN
By Richard Sugarman, University of Vermont, United States
ANNA-TERESA TYMIENIECKA'S PHENOMENOLOGY OF LIFE
By Thomas Ryba, Purdue University, United States
JACQUES DERRIDA'S PROFOUND AND RADICAL QUESTIONING OF HUSSERLIAN PHENOMENOLOGY
By Daniel Giovannangeli and Denis Seron, University of Liege, Belgium
3) The Worldwide Spread of the Original Phenomenological Inspiration
MARIA ZEMBRANO'S PHENOMENOLOGY OF POETIC REASON
By Miguel Illan, University of Valencia, Spain
FERNANDO MONTERO'S LINGUISTIC PHENOMENOLOGY
By Jesus Conill, University of Valencia, Spain
JOSE GAOS
By Alberto Carrillo Canan, Benemerita Autonomous University, Puebla, Mexico
ANTONIO BANFI
By Stefano Zecchi, University of Milan, Italy
ENZO PACI, THE LIFE WORLD FROM AN EMPIRICAL APPROACH
By Stefano Zecchi, University of Milan, Italy
SOFIA VANNI-ROVIGHI
By Stefano Zecchi, University of Milan, Italy
DINO FORMAGGIO
By Stefano Zecchi, University of Milan, Italy
HUSSERLIAN PHENOMENOLOGY IN THE WORK OF MARIO SANCIPRIANO
By Angela Ales Bello, Italian Phenomenology Center, Rome, Italy
KAROL WOJTYLA, BETWEEN PHENOMENOLOGY AND SCHOLASTICISM
By Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, World Phenomenology Institute, Hanover, New Hampshire, United States and Roger Duncan, University of Connecticut, United States
HERMANN SCHMITZ, THE "NEW PHENOMENOLOGY"
By Hermann Schmitz, Kiel University, Germany
MICHEL HENRY'S "RADICAL PHENOMENOLOGY OF LIFE"
By Rolf Kuhn and Michael Staudigl, University of Vienna, Austria
PART THREE: LIFE-ENGAGED PHENOMENOLOGY
1) Phenomenology's Bringing Forth and Formulating Basic Life-Significant Issues
MEDITATIONS ON INTERSUBJECTIVITY AND HISTORICITY IN HUSSERL'S TRANSCENDENTAL PHENOMENOLOGY
By Konrad Rokstad, University of Bergen, Norway
PHENOMENOLOGICAL ETHICS, A HISTORICAL OUTLINE
By Jan Bengtsson, Goteborg University, Sweden
PHENOMENOLOGY, CORPOREITY AND INTERSUBJECTIVITY IN HUSSERL; THE MOST SIGNIFICANT INFLUENCES ON HUSSERL
By Maria Jose Cantista and Maria Manuela Martins, University of Porto, Portugal
PHILOSOPHY OF LANGUAGE AND CORPOREITY
By Luigia Di Pinto, University of Bari, Italy
THE CONCEPTION OF INTENTIONALITY IN PHENOMENOLOGY AND PRAGMATICS
By Eric Grillo, Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris, France
PHENOMENOLOGICAL SOCIOLOGY
By Gary Backhaus, Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland, United States
PHENOMENOLOGY AND PRAGMATISM
By Patrick Bourgeois, Loyola University, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
2) Innovation in Life-Oriented Arenas
THE CONCEPT OF LEBENSWELT IN EUROPEAN CULTURE
By Bianca Maria d'Ippolito, University of Naples, Italy
SIMONE DE BEUVOIR’S FEMINISM, THE OTHER AS SUBJECT
By Judy Miles, Cal Poly, Ponoma, United States
WORK AND ECONOMICS IN MAX SCHELER
By Daniella Verducci, Center for Phenomenology of Life and the Sciences of Life, University of Macerata, Italy
PHENOMENOLOGY AND FUNDAMENTAL EDUCATIONAL THEORY
By Donald Vandenberg, United States and Australia
PHENOMENOLOGY IN INTERDISCIPLINARY AESTHETICS -- LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS: MARLIES KRONEGGER
By Robert J. Wise, Jr., World Phenomenology Institute, United States
FROM INGARDEN TO NATURALISTIC AESTHETICS: MARIA GOLASZEWSKA
By Piotr Mroz and Andrzej Warminski , Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland
PHENOMENOLOGY IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE
By Mamuka Dolidze, Institute of Philosophy of Georgia, Tblisi, Georgia
PHENOMENOLOGY OF RELIGION
By Franco Bosio, University of Verona, Italy
ALFRED SCHUTZ, PROGENITOR OF SOCIAL PHENOMENOLOGY
By Gary Backhaus, Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland, United States
PAUL RICOEUR ON LANGUAGE, ETHICS AND PHILOSOPHICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
By Robert Sweeney, John Carroll University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States
HANNAH ARENDT, PHENOMENOLOGY AND POLITICAL THEORY
By Robert Bernasconi, University of Memphis, United States
EDITH STEIN, PHENOMENOLOGY, THE STATE AND RELIGIOUS COMMITMENT
By Angela Ales Bello, Italian Phenomenology Center, Rome, Italy
3) From Theory to Life-Practice: Phenomenological Psychiatry
LUDWIG BINSWANGER: THE INSPIRING FORCE
By Paolo Ricci Sindoni, University of Messina, Italy
MEDARD BOSS
By Charles E. Scott, The Pennsylvania State University, United States
THE LIFE AND WORK OF ERWIN STRAUS
By Erling Eng, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Lexington, Kentucky, United States
EVA SYRISTOVA
THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL-HERMENEUTICAL APPROACH IN PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND PSYCHOTHERAPY OF SCHIZOPHRENIA IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC
Eva Syristova, Charles University
PHENOMENOLOGY IN HENRI EY’S WORK AND FRENCH PSYCHIATRY
By J. Garrabe, Institut Marcel Riviere, France and F. Regis Cousin, Hopital Sainte-Anne, Paris, France
THE PHENOMENOLOGICO-EXISTENTIAL APPROACH TO PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
By Bruno Callieri, Encyclopedia Italiana, Rome, Italy and
Angela Ales Bello, Italian Phenomenology Center, Rome, Italy
PART FOUR: TOWARD NEW HORIZONS
INTRINSIC DYNAMISMS AND UNTAPPED RESOURCES 683
OF PHENOMENOLOGY
A Note On Edmund Husserl's Late Breakthrough to the Plane of Life, Completing his Itinerary 685
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, World Phenomenology Institute, Hanover, New Hampshire, United States
Phenomenology of Life, Integral and Scientific Fulfilling Husserl's Initial Aspirations and his Last Insights: 687
A Global Movement
By Maria Avelina Cecilia, University of Seville, Spain
Bibliography of Analecta Husserliana 716
Synopsis and Prospectus of Phenomenology's Paths 720
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka
Glossary of Terms 721
Index of Names