Interpreting Husserl Critical and Comparative Studies

Edmund Husserl's importance for the philosophy of our century is immense, but his influence has followed a curious path. Rather than continuous it has been recurrent, ambulatory and somehow irrepressible: no sooner does it wane in one locality than it springs up in another. After playing a majo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Carr, David
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 1987, 1987
Edition:1st ed. 1987
Series:Phaenomenologica, Series Founded by H. L. Van Breda and Published Under the Auspices of the Husserl-Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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505 0 |a Husserl’s Lengthening Shadow: A Historical Introduction -- I. Husserl -- 1. Phenomenology and Relativism -- 2. The Fifth Meditation and Husserl’s Cartesianism -- 3. Husserl’s Crisis and the Problem of History… -- 4. History, Phenomenology and Reflection -- II. Husserl and others -- 5. Intentionality: Husserl and the Analytic Approach -- 6. The Problem of The Non-Empirical Ego: Husserl and Kant -- 7. Findlay, Husserl and The Epoché: Realism and Idealism -- 8. Interpretation and Self-Evidence: Husserl and Hermeneutics -- 9. The Future Perfect: Temporality and Priority in Husserl, Heidegger and Dilthey -- 10. World, World-View, Lifeworld: Husserl and the Conceptual Relativists -- 11. The Lifeworld Revisited: Husserl and Some Recent Interpreters -- III. Husserl and Beyond -- 12. Time-Consciousness and Historical Consciousness -- 13. ‘Personalities of a Higher Order’ -- 14. Cogitamus Ergo Sumus: The Intentionality of the First-Person Plural -- Acknowledgments 
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520 |a Edmund Husserl's importance for the philosophy of our century is immense, but his influence has followed a curious path. Rather than continuous it has been recurrent, ambulatory and somehow irrepressible: no sooner does it wane in one locality than it springs up in another. After playing a major role in Germany during his lifetime, Husserl had been filed away in the history-books of that country when he was discovered by the French during and after World War II. And just as the phenomenological phase of French philosophy was ending in the 1960's, Husserl became important in North America. There his work was first taken seriously by a sizable minority of dissenters from the Anglo-American establish­ ment, the tradition of conceptual and linguistic analysis. More recently, some philosophers within that tradition have drawn on certain of Husserl's central concepts (intentionality, the noema) in addressing problems in the philosophy of mind and the theory of meaning. This is not to say that Husserl's influence in Europe has alto­ gether died out. It may be that he is less frequently discussed there directly, but (as I try to argue in the introductory essay of this volume) his influence lives on in subtler forms, in certain basic attitudes, strategies and problems