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         Phenomenology Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. Postmodernism and Continental Philosophy (Selected Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy) by Hugh J. Silverman, 1988-06
  2. Modern Movements in European Philosophy: Phenomenology, Critical Theory, Structuralism
  3. Nietzsche's Existential Imperative (Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy) by Bernd Magnus, 1978-08
  4. Phenomenology and Psychological Science: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives (History and Philosophy of Psychology)
  5. Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Hegel and The Phenomenology of Spirit (Routledge Philosophy Guidebooks) by Robert Stern, 2001-12-14
  6. Introduction to Phenomenology by Robert Sokolowski, 1999-10-28
  7. Husserl: an analysis of his phenomenology (Northwestern University studies in phenomenology & existential philosophy) by Paul Riceur, 1967
  8. The Problem of Difference: Phenomenology and Poststructuralism (Toronto Studies in Philosophy) by Jeffrey A. Bell, 1998-05-16
  9. Husserl and phenomenology (Hutchinson University library. Philosophy) by Edo Pivcevic, 1970
  10. Sensibility and Singularity: The Problem of Phenomenology in Levinas (Suny Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy) by John E. Drabinski, 2001-04
  11. Descriptions (Selected Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, No 11) by Don Ihde, 1985-10
  12. Role Playing and Identity: The Limits of Theatre As Metaphor (Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy) by Bruce Wilshire, 1991-03
  13. Phenomenology and existentialism, (Sources in contemporary philosophy) by Robert C Solomon, 1972
  14. Hermeneutics and Deconstruction (Selected Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, No 10) by Hugh J. Silverman, 1985-11

41. The Organisation Of The Logic By Jean Hyppolite
Treats primarily of the Science of Logic, with reference to the phenomenology. Explores the interrelations among immediacy, essence and the absolute.
http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/fr/hyppolit.htm
Jean Hyppolite (1952)
Source from State University of New York Press, 1997. Final Chapter before Conclusion reproduced here.
The Organisation of the Logic:
Being, Essence, Concept
The circle of Essence takes up that of Being, and the circle of the Concept that of Essence. "The Whole possesses nothing astonishing" ( Phenomenology inside and outside, "Far from being the product of the dialectic, absolute spirit is on the contrary its condition and principle. Dialectical evolution owes its movement not to the point from which it starts, but to the end towards which it tends-and it is external at the same time as being parallel to being-it is a dualism."' Hegel's originality, however, lies in the rejection of this calling forth by the end. Dialectical evolution is attraction and instinct; it starts from immediate being and returns to immediate being. It is truth only as engendered truth. On the other hand, it is indeed also dualistic, but this dualism is not, as in Spinoza, the parallelism of Logos and Nature which never encounter one another. It is the dualism of mediation. Nature and Logos are simultaneously opposite and identical. This is why the Logos can think itself and the other, contradict itself in itself, and why Nature, which is the anti-Logos, can appear as Logos. The Logos is the absolute truth as self-genesis. However, how can we speak of a truth of the form? The logic, as the science of the absolute form, is the truth for itself, and by means of being opposed to the other philosophical sciences, those of nature and spirit, it is

42. Cogprints - Must Phenomenology Rest On Paradox?
phenomenology and the crisis of philosophy. New York, NY Harper Row. Husserl, E.(1970). philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 24, 530551.
http://cogprints.org/2207/
@import url(http://cogprints.org/eprints.css); @import url(http://cogprints.org/eprints.css); @import url(http://cogprints.org/print.css); Cogprints
Must phenomenology rest on paradox?
Brown, Steven Ravett Must phenomenology rest on paradox? Full text available as:
ASCII
Abstract
Husserl made certain assumptions about the nature of the components of experienced phenomena derived from and similar to the assumptions of the psychologists of his time. I will present some of those assumptions, and argue, and support that argument with evidence, that they are incorrect. I claim that if that is true, then Husserlian methodology is flawed, to the extent that for certain investigations both the epoch? and the method of eidetic variation necessitate circularity which invalidates their utility. These arguments and some of their implications are presented in detail. Keywords: Husserl, phenomenology, gestalts, cognition, Gurwitsch, philosophy of mind Subjects: Psychology Cognitive Psychology
Philosophy
Epistemology ... Philosophy of Mind ID Code: Deposited By: Brown, Dr. Steven Ravett

43. SpringerLink - Publication
An international journal which underlines the relevance of Husserl's phenomenology, both for contemporary philosophy and for the wider academic field.
http://www.kluweronline.com/issn/0167-9848
Articles Publications Publishers
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Publication Husserl Studies Publisher: Springer Science+Business Media B.V., Formerly Kluwer Academic Publishers B.V. ISSN: 0167-9848 (Paper) 1572-8501 (Online) Subject: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law Issues in bold contain content you are entitled to view. Volume 21 Number 2 / June 2005 Number 1 / April 2005 Request a sample Volume 20 Number 3 / December 2004 Number 2 / June 2004 Number 1 / January 2004 Volume 19 Number 3 / January 2003 Number 2 / January 2003 Number 1 / January 2003 Volume 18 Number 3 / January 2002 Number 2 / January 2002 Number 1 / January 2002 Volume 17 Number 3 / January 2001 Number 2 / January 2001 Number 1 / January 2000 Volume 16 Number 3 / January 1999 Number 2 / January 1999 Number 1 / January 1999 Volume 15 Number 3 / January 1998 Number 2 / January 1998 Number 1 / January 1998 Volume 14 Number 3 / January 1997 Number 2 / January 1997 Number 1 / January 1997 First page
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44. Burt Hopkins Faculty Information
The New Yearbook for phenomenology and Phenomenological philosophy IV (2004), eds . Nietzsche and Plato s philosophy of Life, Society for phenomenology
http://www.seattleu.edu/artsci/philosophy/faculty/hopkins.htm
Burt Hopkins, Ph.D.
Professor Department of Philosophy
Seattle University
900 Broadway
Seattle, WA 98122 E-mail: bhopkins@seattleu.edu
Office: Casey 417
Phone: 206-296-5469

Dr. Burt Hopkins is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Core Program at Seattle University. Receiving his Ph.D. in 1988 from DePaul University, he joined Seattle University in 1990. Dr. Hopkins specializes in twentieth century European philosophy, Husserl, Heidegger, early modern philosophy, Plato, and philosophy and psychology. He has taught courses on ancient Greek philosophy, modern philosophy, phenomenology, Heidegger, philosophy and literature and philosophy and psychology. Dr. Hopkins is General Editor for New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy and serves on the editorial board for The Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology.
Selected Publications Books
Edmund Husserl and Jacob Klein on the Origination of the Logic of Symbolic Mathematics: An
Inquiry into the Historicity of Meaning (University of Wisconsin Press), Forthcoming.

45. SpringerLink - Publication
Quarterly journal of philosophy and the social sciences, exploring the logic of inquiry, methodology, epistemology of social science practices. Phenomenological perspectives, broadly defined, are a primary, though not an exclusive focus. Edited by George Psathas, and official journal of the Society for phenomenology and the Human Sciences. Published by Kluwer Academic Publishers. Includes contents and abstracts.
http://www.kluweronline.com/issn/0163-8548
Articles Publications Publishers
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Publication Human Studies Publisher: Springer Science+Business Media B.V., Formerly Kluwer Academic Publishers B.V. ISSN: 0163-8548 (Paper) 1572-851X (Online) Subject: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law Issues in bold contain content you are entitled to view. Volume 28 Number 2 / June 2005 Number 1 / March 2005 Request a sample Volume 27 Number 4 / January 2004 Number 3 / September 2004 Number 2 / June 2004 Number 1 / March 2004 Volume 26 Number 4 / December 2003 Number 3 / September 2003 Number 2 / June 2003 Number 1 / March 2003 Volume 25 Number 4 / December 2002 Number 3 / September 2002 Number 2 / June 2002 Number 1 / March 2002 Volume 24 Number 4 / December 2001 Number 3 / September 2001 Numbers 1-2 / March 2001 Volume 23 Number 4 / October 2000 Number 3 / July 2000 Number 2 / April 2000 Number 1 / January 2000 Volume 22 Numbers 2-4 / October 1999 Number 1 / January 1999 Volume 21 Number 4 / October 1998 Number 3 / July 1998 Number 2 / April 1998 Number 1 / January 1998 Volume 20 Number 4 / October 1997 Number 3 / July 1997 Number 2 / April 1997 Number 1 / January 1997 First page
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46. Romanian Society For Phenomenology International Phenomenology
PO Box 60102 Shoreline, WA 98160. CONTACT. info@noesispress.com www.noesispress.com. NEW YEARBOOK FOR phenomenology AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL philosophy
http://www.phenomenology.ro/journals.php?jid=12

47. PHIL 218: Selected Thinkers
By Eric Steinhart, intended for students of philosophy.
http://www.wpunj.edu/cohss/philosophy/COURSES/HEGEL/DEFAULT.HTP
G.W. F. Hegel
The Phenomenology of Spirit
Prof. Eric Steinhart (C) 1998
Steinhart PHIL 218 Home 19th Century Thinkers Philosophy Home This site presents my introduction to Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit . The Phenomenology is an extremely difficult book to read, much less to understand. The goal of this site is to provide a clear, straightforward introduction to Hegel's work. My approach is Platonic: I treat Hegel's philosophy as a kind of dynamical Platonism. I use Plato's Divided Line and Myth of the Cave to structure my approach to the Phenomenology . Of course, this risks over-platonizing Hegel. But Plato's Line and Cave are easy to understand, and they are good ways to get into the Phenomenology . Once you're into the Phenomenology , you'll need to turn to more advanced commentaries and interpretations.
G. W. F. Hegel
General help with the Phenomenology:
Commentaries on the Phenomenology:
I am not offering a scholarly interpretation of the Phenomenology or of Hegel's philosophy. My sole purpose here is to provide an accessible introduction. Although I have made every effort to attend to both the spirit and letter of Hegel's thought, fine scholarly accuracy always takes a back seat to pedagogical clarity. It's a matter of priorities.

48. Literary Encyclopedia: Husserl, Edmund
published as The New Yearbook of phenomenology and Phenomenological philosophy.The diversity of postHusserlian philosophy and phenomenology embraces
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=2274

49. Contributions To Phenomenology-Springer BookSeries
The purpose of this Book Series is to foster the development of phenomenological philosophy through creative research. Contemporary issues in philosophy, other disciplines and in culture generally, offer opportunities for the application of phenomenological methods that call for creative responses
http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/frontpage/0,11855,5-40109-69-33110710-0,00
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50. Alfred Schutz [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Phenomenological philosophy of the Social Sciences. If phenomenology is comprehendedin III, Studies in Phenomenological philosophy. Ed. Ilse Schutz.
http://www.iep.utm.edu/s/schutz.htm
Alfred Schutz Alfred Schutz philosophized about social science in a broad signification of the word. He was deeply respectful of actual scientific practice, and produced a classification of the sciences; explicated methodological postulates for empirical science in general and the social sciences specifically; and clarified basic concepts for interpretative sociology in particular. His work shows how philosophy of the cultural sciences can be done phenomenologically.
Table of Contents (Clicking on the links below will take you to those parts of this article) 1. Life and Works Alfred Schutz was born in Vienna in 1899. Like Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper, and Edmund Husserl, Sigmund Freud, and Franz Brentano before them, he came from the last phase of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He was an only child in an upper-middle-class Austrian Jewish family and had a strong mother. In his youth he attended a classical Gymnasium in Vienna and developed a lifelong interest in music. After his serving in World War I, he received his doctorate in the philosophy of law at Vienna under Hans Kelsen in three years; studied marginal-utility economics; and became interested in the interpretative ( verstehende ) sociology of Max Weber. His initial attempt to ground the social sciences in the philosophy of Henri Bergson not proving satisfactory, he was led late in the 1920s by his friend Felix Kaufmann to study Edmund Husserl's

51. Philosophy, Phenomenology And Psychiatry
philosophy, phenomenology and Psychiatry. Göteborg, November 1516 2003.Ernst Josephson Strömkarlen (The water sprite, 1884).
http://www.phil.gu.se/sffp/fp.html
Philosophy, Phenomenology and Psychiatry
(The water sprite, 1884).
This conference will investigate issues of common interest to philosophers and psychiatrists, with a special emphasis on the phenomenological tradition in philosophy and its relevance for present-day psychiatry. It is arranged by the Swedish Association for Philosophy and Psychiatry SFFP ) in cooperation with Nordic Network for Philosophy, Medicine and Mental Health and the Department of Philosophy to 18 and 9 to 18 , respectively, on the 15th and 16th of November 2003. The location will be the Faculty of Arts this map
The conference consists of one single oral session with altogether 18 submitted presentations, plus two invited lectures and a poster session. The first invited speaker is Thomas Fuchs from Heidelberg, who is giving a keynote speech with the title "The Challenge of Neuroscience: Psychiatry and Phenomenology Today The second invited speech will be given by Sten Levander Actus reus and mens rea: What is an Act? What is Free Will? What is Moral Responsibility?"
The detailed programme can be found here
Registration
The conference fee is SEK 600. Students pay half of this. The fee covers conference participation, the booklet with abstracts and a buffet lunch (Sunday). A dinner is planned for Saturday evening and costs an extra SEK 300.

52. Home Of The CSH
The Society was founded in 1984 to further the study of Continental philosophy in Canada and abroad. Its membership includes scholars and students working in the various Continental traditions including classical German philosophy, phenomenology, existential philosophy, hermeneutics, critical theory, poststructuralism, deconstruction, postmodernism, and feminism as well as in related disciplines within the arts, humanities, and social sciences.
http://www.symposium.fsj.ualberta.ca/csh-sch.htm
Co-President
Diane Enns
Vice-President
Tanya DiTommaso Treasurer
John Bruin Co-President/ Secretary
Paul Fairfield Department of Philosophy
McMaster University
1280 Main St.W.
Hamilton, ON  L8S 4K1 Department of Philosophy
University of Ottawa
P.O. Box 450, Station A Ottawa, ON   K1N 6N5 26-4160 Bonavista Dr. Richmond, B.C. Department of Philosophy Queen's University Kingston, ON   K7L 3N6 ennsd@mcmaster.ca tditomma@uottawa.ca bruinxyz@hotmail.com paulfairfield@hotmail.com ... Who We Are... Announcements / Annonces CSH Bulletin  / Bulletin de la SCH Other / Autre WWW http://www.symposium.fsj.ualberta.ca Last modified: July, 2004

53. Alfred Schutz, Phenomenology And Research Methodology For Information Behaviour
phenomenology, per se, is a branch of philosophy, owing its origin to the phenomenology is probably the most significant philosophical movement of the
http://informationr.net/tdw/publ/papers/schutz02.html
.centre : (text align : "center")
Alfred Schutz, phenomenology and research methodology for information behaviour research
Professor T.D. Wilson
Professor Emeritus
University of Sheffield
United Kingdom
t.d.wilson@shef.ac.uk
Abstract Explores the phenomenological sociology of Alfred Schutz, with particular reference to his concern to understand the social distribution of knowledge in society. The methodological principles of phenomenology are discussed, with particular reference to 'ideal types'. Schutz's identification of the stratification of knowledge with three key ideal types is elaborated and the implications for information behaviour research are discussed. The relationship between methodology and method is discussed, and a novel typology of social research methods is offered.
INTRODUCTION: PHENOMENOLOGY
Phenomenology, per se, is a branch of philosophy, owing its origin to the work of Husserl and later writers [e.g., Heidegger, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, who took the ideas into existentialism]. The aim of phenomenology, as propounded by Husserl, is to study human phenomena without considering questions of their causes, their objective reality, or even their appearances. The aim is to study how human phenomena are experienced in consciousness, in cognitive and perceptual acts, as well as how they may be valued or appreciated aesthetically. Phenomenology seeks to understand how persons construct meaning and a key concept is intersubjectivity. Our experience of the world, upon which our thoughts about the world are based, is intersubjective because we experience the world with and through others. Whatever meaning we create has its roots in human actions, and the totality of social artefacts and cultural objects is grounded in human activity.

54. GUIDEBOOK FOR PUBLISHING PHILOSOPHY: JOURNALS
studies dealing with the relation of phenomenological philosophy to other Reviewer s comments Research in phenomenology is an annual publication of
http://sophia.smith.edu/~jmoulton/guidebook/jend1.htm
GUIDEBOOK FOR PUBLISHING PHILOSOPHY: JOURNALS
PROCESS STUDIES Frequency: 4/year. Circulation: 1,000. Focus: Whiteheadian philosophy and theology. Editorial address: Prof. Lewis S. Ford, Department of Philosophy, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA 23508. Double space manuscripts, with notes at end; avoid se xist language. Processing time: 2-3 months. Authors' names not concealed from reviewers; reviewers' names sometimes concealed from authors. Referees' comments usually sent on, particularly in cases of rejection or requested revisions. Acceptance rate: 38%. Average wait till publication: 1 year. Accepted authors should wait: no. Special topic issues: half the time, with varying percent of articles invited, topics announced in advance. Ratio of contributed to invited pieces: 7/13. Book reviews: yes. Editorial statement: Process philosophy may be defined as applying primarily, though not exclusively, the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead and his intellectual associates, most notably Charles Hartshorne. With this as the focus

55. Research In Phenomenology
and historical studies of special relevance to phenomenological philosophy.ISSN 00855553 Editor-in-Chief John C. Sallis Dept. of philosophy
http://gort.ucsd.edu/newjour/r/msg02542.html
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Research in Phenomenology http://www.kluweronline.com/issn/0085-5553/ Publisher: Brill Academic Publishers Research in Phenomenology deals with phenomenological philosophy in a broad sense, including original phenomenological research, critical and interpretative studies of major phenomenological thinkers, studies relating phenomenological philosophy to other disciplines, and historical studies of special relevance to phenomenological philosophy. ISSN 0085-5553 Editor-in-Chief: John C. Sallis Dept. of Philosophy Pennsylvania State University University Park, PA USA Content available by subscription. Abstracts available online. Articles available in PDF format. Current Issue: September 1 2003, Volume 33, Issue 1 Date: 10 Sept. 2004 NewJour Home NewJour: R Search
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56. Project: Het Bestaan, Verschil En Constructie: De Contour Van Een Feministische
phenomenology three central issues in feminist philosophy , ie the relation in critical discussions of French phenomenological philosophy in general
http://www.onderzoekinformatie.nl/nl/oi/nod/onderzoek/OND1296347/toon
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Project: Het bestaan, verschil en constructie: de contour van een feministische fenomenologie
Print View Titel-Eng Existence, difference and construction: outline of a feminist phenomenology Samenvatting-Eng Looptijd 01/2003 - onbekend Status afgesloten URL http://www.kun.nl/cvv/medewerkers/stoller.html Betrokken organisaties
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57. PH207 Phenomenology
Optional for BA/BSc philosophy and BSc philosophy and Economics. Ideas Pertainingto a Pure phenomenology and to a Phenomenological philosophy,
http://www.lse.ac.uk/resources/calendar2004-2005/courseGuides/PH/2004_PH207.htm
Home Help Search Site index ... LSE for you You are here - Welcome to LSE Calendar Course guides

Phenomenology
This information is for the 2004/05 session. Teacher responsible Dr Stephan Hartmann, T401A
Availability Optional for BA/BSc Philosophy and BSc Philosophy and Economics. This course is not available as an outside option.
Core syllabus The course covers the tradition of Continental phenomenology.
Content (a) Husserl, with reference to Husserl's foundation of phenomenological philosophy. (b) Heidegger, with reference to Being and Time. (c) Sartre, with reference to Being and Nothingness. (d) Merleau-Ponty, with reference to Phenomenology of Perception.
Teaching This is an intercollegiate course. Lectures are taught at one of the colleges of the University of London, classes are held at LSE. Lectures PH207 x 20 (MT, LT); Classes PH207.A x 20 (MT, LT).
Written work Students will be expected to write at least two essays per term and give class papers.
Reading list David Bell, Husserl; P Caws, Sartre; E Husserl, Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy, The Idea of Phenomenology, Cartesian Meditations, The Phenomenology of Internal Time Consciousness; L Kolakowski

58. Phenomenology And Philosophy, By Don Boland - Universitas Number 9 (2001)
Is it possible, as the Pope seems to try and do, to reconcile Thomism withphenomenology?
http://www.cts.org.au/2001/phenomenology.htm
Centre for Thomistic Studies Article Index Recommended Books Recommended Links Universitas , Number 9, September 2001 Index Next Article >>
Phenomenology and Philosophy
dgboland © 2001 "Is it possible, as the Pope seems to try and do, to reconcile Thomism with phenomenology?" is a question that has recently been put to us. It would be useful first of all to define the terms of the question. As we may presume that most of our readers will have a pretty good idea of what Thomism is, the task of definition principally relates to the word "Phenomenology". As most would be aware, it is the name for a philosophical movement that owes its origin to Edmund Husserl. It came to prominence in the early part of the last century and has had profound influence on the whole range of contemporary thought. It is obviously a movement of some significance even today. So as not to be accused of colouring our definition of it, let us take over for this purpose, without necessarily accepting what is said in it, one of the many descriptions of Phenomenology that can be found simply by searching the internet.
Phenomenology
"Phenomenology, 20th-century philosophical movement dedicated to describing the structures of experience as they present themselves to consciousness, without recourse to theory, deduction, or assumptions from other disciplines such as the natural sciences."

59. CHAPTER VIII
Within the Czech philosophical tradition, phenomenology gradually gained a place . Czech philosophy at the time of the first reception of phenomenology
http://www.crvp.org/book/Series04/IVA-4/chapter_viii.htm
CHAPTER VIII
THE ROLE OF PHENOMENOLOGY IN CZECH PHILOSOPHICAL LIFE
Within the Czech philosophical tradition, phenomenology gradually gained a place. It aimed simultaneously at the achievement of an absolutely certain and verifiable knowledge through its apriorism and at constituting an interpretation of the whole and an approach to the world. Beginning from a primitive grasp of phenomenology Czech philosophers proceeded to a better comprehension of its nature and methodology, to attempts to establish its theoretical-cognitive limits. The roots of its interpretative possibilities for understanding the world and life were examined and the premises were created whereby phenomenology, a discipline which concentrates on the phenomenal aspects of reality, could be grasped as such. In this way Czech philosophy maintained a critical distance from phenomenology, as well as a quite high level of comprehension. In any attempt to determine the place of phenomenology in Czech philosophical life it is, of course, necessary to take into account the temporal coincidence of the main streams of Czech philosophy with developing phases in phenomenology. From the outset, phenomenology constituted a structured whole, with more or less shifting internal boundaries; by European standards it was a differentiated movement with markedly distinct approaches.
THE ORIGINS OF PHENOMENOLOGY: EDMUND HUSSERL AND HIS TIMES In an attempt to find the roots of knowledge, Husserl formulated the imperative "to the things themselves!", i.e. to that which is given as direct evidence. This meant a sharp rejection of any positivist ideal of science, while retaining the descriptive-psychological methods. This was done in Husserl's celebrated "Logical Investigations", in which he identified the Czech mathematician and logician, Bernard Bolzano, as "the greatest logician of all times". At the same time he laid the basis for a critical resolution of questions regarding the relationships between psychology, phenomenology and linguistics. This was done through clashes with Prague University's professor Anton Marty, the founder of the philosophy of language in the Czech lands.

60. Faculty News
Volume 2 in the series Islamic philosophy and Occidental phenomenology in and The New Yearbook for phenomenology and Phenomenological philosophy.
http://www.fau.edu/divdept/schmidt/philosophy/faculty_news.htm

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