Life - The Outburst of Life in the Human Sphere Scientific Philosophy / Phenomenology of Life and the Sciences of Life. Book II

Science and philosophy have both undergone radical transformations in recent times. Now they are poised for a pivotal alliance. Science has abandoned the mechanistic model of nature. Philosophy has broken through the tight, traditional circle of conceptualisation, intellectualistic preconceptions an...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Tymieniecka, Anna-Teresa (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 1999, 1999
Edition:1st ed. 1999
Series:Analecta Husserliana, The Yearbook of Phenomenological Research
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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505 0 |a Inaugural Essay -- The Ontopoietic Self-Individualisation of Being: In Search of the Foothold of Change, Becoming and Transformation -- I Individuality and Complexity — Classic Questions Pertaining to the Ontopoiesis of Life -- Nature and Individuality -- Faktizität und Individualität: Der frühe Heidegger und Aristoteles -- Life and Human Life in Max Scheler: Phenomenological Problems of Identification and Individualization -- The Lifeworld as Hermeneutical Principle for Understanding the Human Condition: Functions and Limits of the “Everyday Life” Concept -- The Phenomenological Conception of Quantum Theory and the Polyphony of Modern Fiction -- Outlines of an Axiology of Human Creations -- II Self-Revelation of Life and Its Human Sphere -- The Ideals of Life in Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka’s Thought -- The Cosmic Tree According to Le Clézio in Le Procès-Verbal, Désert and Le Chercheur d’Or -- Poetic Inspiration and the Renewal of Life: Le Songe de Vaux --  
505 0 |a Ideology, Utopia and Religion: The Monumental and Absolute Metaphors of Social Imagination -- Friedrich Nietzsche: Bringing Truth to Life -- IV Continuities/Discontinuities of Life’s Expansion -- On a Phenomenological Analysis of the “Erlebnis” of Time -- How to Wake up from Descartes’ Dream or the Impossibility of a Complete Reduction -- Teleological Explanations and Reductionism in Molecular Biology -- Life and Negativity: Towards an Ontology of Human Lack -- Human Creative Activity as Separability of Principles: The Possibility of Good and Evil -- Realism and Faith in Transformation through the Creativeness of a Conscious Life: Simone Weil (1909–1943) -- Index of Names 
505 0 |a Groundwork for Ontopoetics -- Stefan Zweig and the Secret of Artistic Creation -- Une Approche Phénoménologique de la Musique Byzantine -- Calvinistic Anthropology and French Poetry in the Sixteenth Century: Purity and Guilt in the Baroque Age -- Imagination and Practical Creativity in Paul Ricoeur -- III The Existential Spread -- A Phenomenological Psychology of Emotion: From Sartre’s Esquisse d’une Théorie des Emotions to Ignacio Matte Blanco’s Biological Theory -- Solipsism, Empathy, Otherness: On Husserl’s Overcoming of the “Closure” of the I, to Otherness as a Guarantee of an “Aperture” to the World -- Ontological Insecurity, Existential Self-Analysis and Literature: The Case of Henry James -- The Construction of Reality in the Magic World -- The Phenomenon of Loneliness and the Meta-Theory ofConsciousness -- Economy and Social Planning: Economic Development and the Mobilization of Society’s Basic Resources -- The Embodied Politics of Thomas Hobbes --  
653 |a Philosophy, Modern 
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520 |a Science and philosophy have both undergone radical transformations in recent times. Now they are poised for a pivotal alliance. Science has abandoned the mechanistic model of nature. Philosophy has broken through the tight, traditional circle of conceptualisation, intellectualistic preconceptions and cognitive presuppositions. The two now meet to focus on the palpitating, fluctuating stream of nature/life. Their traditional prejudices dispersed under the pressure of new evidence, philosophy/phenomenology of life and the sciences of life meet in the Archimedean point of the human creative condition (proper to the phenomenology of life) and the role of the human subject (central to the scientific view of reality). They necessitate each other: without the sciences of life, philosophy/phenomenology of life cannot penetrate the intricacies of nature/life; without recourse to philosophy to delineate, design, provide clues to the organisation of natural evidence, the sciences of life cannot devise new strategies for inquiry nor survey their field. The present collection throws open the barriers that separate nature and culture, works of physis and those of the spirit. Following the philosophical model of the ontopoieisis of life, focusing on its specifically human sphere - that of the human self-interpretation-in-existence - it encircles the vast, new horizons of the new alliance