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Edmund Husserl - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl ( ; April 8, 1859, Prostějov, Moravia, Austrian Empire – April 26, 1938, Freiburg, Germany) was a philosopher who is deemed the founder of phenomenology. He ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Husserl |
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Phenomenology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Phenomenology may refer to: • Phenomenology (architecture), based on the experience of building materials and their sensory properties • Phenomenology (particle physics), the part of particle physics...
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Internet resources concerning Edmund Husserl, the 20th-century German philosopher. ... But nowhere in these pages will you find a synopsis, summary, or other such treatise on Husserl's phenomenology, so you may wish to jump to the chronological bibliography of Husserl's writings. Here you may search for the...
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The historical movement of phenomenology is the philosophical tradition launched in the first half of the 20th century by Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Jean-Paul Sartre, et al.
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Fink, in his detailed response to neo- Kantians' readings of Husserl's phenomenology (1932), scolds them for even addressing arguments made in Husserl's 1900-1 and 1913 publications--for Fink contends that those positions now must be assimilated to Husserl's later formulations.
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Byers argues that Husserl's transcendental phenomenology is both a philosophy of closure and control and a philosophy of openness and vulnerability.
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Here are 2 essays by Edmund Husserl: 1) on the meaning of "phenomenology", as as Husserl prepared it for the Encyclopedia Britannica; and 2) on the intellectual & moral crisis facing Western Man. ... Text Archive > Open Source Books > Husserl: Phenomenology and the Crisis of Western Man...
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