Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Philosophers - Husserl Edmund
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 68    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Husserl Edmund:     more books (100)
  1. Psychological and Transcendental Phenomenology and the Confrontation with Heidegger (1927-1931): The Encyclopaedia Britannica Article, the Amsterdam Lectures, ... Edmund HusserlCollected Works) by Edmund Husserl, 1997-10-31
  2. Early Writings in the Philosophy of Logic and Mathematics (Husserliana: Edmund HusserlCollected Works) by Edmund Husserl, 2010-11-02
  3. Thing and Space: Lectures of 1907 (Husserliana: Edmund HusserlCollected Works) by Edmund Husserl, 2010-11-02
  4. Introduction to Logic and Theory of Knowledge: Lectures 1906/07 (Husserliana: Edmund HusserlCollected Works) by Edmund Husserl, 2009-06-02
  5. Edmund Husserl: Philosopher of Infinite Tasks by Maurice Natanson, 1974-06-01
  6. The Idea of Phenomenology (Husserliana: Edmund HusserlCollected Works) by Edmund Husserl, 2010-11-02
  7. Husserl, Heidegger, and the Space of Meaning: Paths Toward Trancendental Phenomenology (SPEP) by Steven Galt Crowell, 2001-04-14
  8. Phantasy, Image Consciousness, and Memory (1898-1925) (Husserliana: Edmund HusserlCollected Works) by Edmund Husserl, 2006-12
  9. Edmund Husserl's Phenomenology: A Critical Commentary (Midland Book) by James M. Edie, 1987-06-01
  10. Phenomenological Psychology by Edmund Husserl, 1977-12-01
  11. The Basic Problems of Phenomenology: From the Lectures, Winter Semester, 1910-1911 (Husserliana: Edmund HusserlCollected Works) (Volume 0) by Edmund Husserl, 2006-10-09
  12. Husserl Search For Certitude by Leszek Kolakowski, 2001-06-20
  13. The Shorter Logical Investigations (International Library of Philosophy) by Edmund Husserl, 2001-10-12
  14. Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology (SPEP) by Edmund Husserl, 1970-06-01

21. Edmund Husserl: Blogs, Photos, Videos And More On Technorati
sartre sivilhayvan Cum, 10/05/2007 1249 -kategorisiz 1905 1980 edebiyat nobeli edmund husserl filozof Frans z J jean paul kierkegaard martin heidegger
http://technorati.com/tag/Edmund Husserl
Now in Lifestyle
The latest news, blogs, and advice on health, design, and travel. advanced ... Blogger Central
10 posts tagged Edmund Husserl
Subscribe search in entire post tags only of blogs with any authority a little authority some authority a lot of authority in language all languages Arabic (العربية) Chinese (中文) Dutch (Nederlands) English French (Fran§ais) German (Deutsch) Greek (Ελληνικά) Hebrew (עברית) Italian (Italiano) Japanese (日本語) Korean (한국어) Norwegian (Norsk) Persian (فارسی) Polish (Polski) Portuguese (Portuguªs) Russian (Русский) Spanish (Espa±ol) Swedish (Svenska) Turkish (T¼rk§e) Vietnamese (Tiếng Việt)
  • for me simply there (pitstop 08)
    “Our first outlook upon life is that of natural human beings, imaging, judging, feeling, willing, “from the natural standpoint“. Let us make clear to ourselves what this means in the form of simple meditations which we can best carry on in the first person. 14 days ago in barebones communication Authority: 5
    NOTA SOBRE LAS "INVESTIGACIONES L“GICAS" DE HUSSERL
  • 22. Edmund Husserl - Wikipédia
    Translate this page O desenvolvimento e a crítica do conceito brentaniano aparece como o motivo permanente, central, da obra de Edmund Husserl. A principal diferença, em sua
    http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Husserl
    Edmund Husserl
    Origem: Wikip©dia, a enciclop©dia livre.
    Ir para: navega§£o pesquisa Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl Edmund Husserl Nascimento 8 de Abril de
    Prossnitz
    Falecimento 26 de Abril de
    Friburgo
    Nacionalidade Alem£o Ocupa§£o Fil³sofo Escola/tradi§£o Fenomenologia Principais interesses Epistemologia Matem¡tica Id©ias not¡veis Epoch© Noema Noesis Redu§£o eid©tica , fundador da Fenomenologia Influªncias Descartes Brentano Stumpf Frege Influenciados Sartre Heidegger Derrida Merleau-Ponty ... Fink Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl Prossnitz 8 de Abril de Friburgo 26 de Abril de ) foi um fil³sofo alem£o , conhecido como fundador da fenomenologia
    editar Biografia
    Nascido numa fam­lia judaica numa pequena localidade da Mor¡via (regi£o da atual Repºblica Checa ). Aluno de Franz Brentano e Carl Stumpf , Husserl influenciou entre outros os alem£es Edith Stein Eugen Fink e Martin Heidegger , e os franceses Jean-Paul Sartre Maurice Merleau-Ponty Michel Henry e Jacques Derrida . O interesse do matem¡tico Hermann Weyl pela l³gica intuicionista e pela no§£o de impredicatividade teria resultado de contatos com Husserl. Na verdade, a impuls£o primeira da

    23. Husserl Page
    Internet resources concerning edmund husserl, the 20thcentury German philosopher. The present volume contains research manuscripts by edmund husserl
    http://www.husserlpage.com/
    The Husserl Page Update: 01 Jun 2007 Aim: To provide easy access to those net resources pertaining to the life and work of the 20th century philosopher, Edmund Husserl.
    Life and Work: Links:
    • Biographical Information Schema of the Nachlass Husserl Archives ... site map
      WWW husserlpage.com The aim of The Husserl Page , which in reality consists of many distinct pages , is twofold. First, this site provides a series of originally created bibliographic and informational pages relevant for research into Husserl's philosophy and development thereof. Second, this site supplies an exhaustive listing of (external) internet sites relevant for research into the life and philosophy of Edmund Husserl. To get a sense of the structure of this site and its contents, you may wish to consult the site map . The map provides a catalog of all the pages herein and indicates their placement. 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 various "introductions" to phenomenology by Husserl himself. If you are looking for such a text, the

    24. Edmund Husserl [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
    Biography of the leader of the German phenomenological movement together with an explanation of his thought. By Marianne Sawicki.
    http://www.iep.utm.edu/h/husserl.htm
    Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) Although not the first to coin the term, it is uncontroversial to suggest that the German philosopher, Edmund Husserl (1859-1938), is the "father" of the philosophical movement known as phenomenology. Phenomenology can be roughly described as the sustained attempt to describe experiences (and the "things themselves") without metaphysical and theoretical speculations. Husserl suggested that only by suspending or bracketing away the "natural attitude" could philosophy becomes its own distinctive and rigorous science, and he insisted that phenomenology is a science of consciousness rather than of empirical things. Indeed, in Husserl’s hands phenomenology began as a critique of both psychologism and naturalism. Naturalism is the thesis that everything belongs to the world of nature and can be studied by the methods appropriate to studying that world (that is, the methods of the hard sciences). Husserl argued that the study of consciousness must actually be very different from the study of nature. For him, phenomenology does not proceed from the collection of large amounts of data and to a general theory beyond the data itself, as in the scientific method of induction. Rather, it aims to look at particular examples without theoretical presuppositions (such as the phenomena of intentionality, of love, of two hands touching each other, and so forth), before then discerning what is essential and necessary to these experiences. Although all of the key, subsequent phenomenologists (

    25. Edmund Husserl (Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy)
    edmund husserl was the principal founder of phenomenology — and thus one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century.
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/husserl/
    Cite this entry Search the SEP Advanced Search Tools ...
    Please Read How You Can Help Keep the Encyclopedia Free
    Edmund Husserl
    First published Fri Feb 28, 2003; substantive revision Fri Jul 6, 2007 th century. He has made important contributions to almost all areas of philosophy and anticipated central ideas of its neighbouring disciplines such as linguistics, sociology and cognitive psychology.
    1. Life and work
    Husserl was born in Prossnitz (Moravia) on April 8 th Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint (1874). After a brief military service in Vienna, Husserl followed Masaryk's advice and studied with Brentano from 1884-86. Brentano then recommended Husserl to his pupil Carl Stumpf in Halle, who is perhaps best known for his Psychology of Tone (two volumes, 1883/90). This recommendation enabled Husserl to prepare and submit his habilitation dissertation On the Concept of Number (1887) with Stumpf.

    26. Philosophers : Edmund Husserl
    husserl is the father of phenomenology. Born in the former Czechloslovakia, husserl studied in Leipzig, Berlin and Vienna, where he also taught.
    http://www.trincoll.edu/depts/phil/philo/phils/husserl.html
    Edmund Husserl
    Phenomenlogist
    Husserl is the father of phenomenology. Born in the former Czechloslovakia, Husserl studied in Leipzig, Berlin and Vienna, where he also taught. He began his studies as a mathemetician, but his studies were influenced by Brentano, who moved him to study more psychology and philosophy. He wrote his first book in 1891, The Philosophy of Arithmetic . This book dealt mostly with mathematical issues, but his interests soon shifted. Husserl immersed himself in the study of logic from 1890-1900, and he soonafter produced another text: Logical Investigations Some of his major ideas of this era were intentionality, relations, and identity of things. He came to focus on perceptual experience, and as he began to shed his early Kantian ways, he wrote Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy (1913). His last three books were Formal and Transcendental Logic Cartesian Meditations (1931), and Lectures on the Phenomenology of Inner Time-Consciousness (1928), a group of lectures he compiled and edited. His lectures and essays comprise a large amount of his works.

    27. Edmund Husserl
    Features the life and studies of edmund husserl.
    http://www.philosophyprofessor.com/philosophers/edmund-husserl.php
    @import url(http://www.philosophyprofessor.com/side/cssphp.css); HOME Philosophies Philosophers Library ... Zeno of Elea web here Some Rights Reserved . Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. By accessing this site or its contents you agree to the below terms.
    SITE MAP
    Edmund Husserl
    Ideas
    - The edifice of scientific knowledge must be built up by rigorously securing each step through direct direct intuitive insight, without presuppositions. - Phenomenology provides a founding 'first philosophy' for all knowledge by its method of describing the essence of 'the things themselves' as they are constituted in consciousness. - The ultimate foundation for the constitution of everything that appears in consciousness is the transcendental ego, making phenomenology idealistic and transcendental. - Conscious experience is intentional in nature, always having both a subject and object pole. - The lifeworld is the practical, everyday world that provides the foundation for all specialized activities and that must be phenomenologically described.
    Biography
    Edmund Husserl was born April 8, 1859, into a Jewish family in the town of Prossnitz in Moravia, then a part of the Austrian Empire. Although there was a Jewish technical school in the town, Edmund's father, a clothing merchant, had the means and the inclination to send the boy away to Vienna at the age of 10 to begin his German classical education in the Realgymnasium of the capital. A year later, in 1870, Edmund transferred to the Staatsgymnasium in Olm¼tz, closer to home. He graduated in 1876 and went to Leipzig for university studies.

    28. Edmund Husserl - Philosopher - Bibliography
    edmund husserl philosopher, online resources on the egs.
    http://www.egs.edu/resources/husserl.html
    var baseDir = '../'; @import url("../style/ie.css"); EGS Home MA in Communication PhD in Communication Admin ... EGS Online
    Edmund Husserl
    Bibliography Links
    Biography
    Edmund Husserl His dissertation was on the theory of the calculus of variations. He taught for a short period in Berlin; however, an interest in the lectures of Franz Brentano inspired him to return to Vienna in 1884. These lectures had a great impact on Husserl, moving him to further his studies in psychology and philosophy. Brentano's concept of intention as applied to the philosophy of consciousness as consciousness of something was a key influence on Husserl. 1886-7 was a pivotal year for Husserl. He moved to Halle, and studied psychology, writing his Habilitationsschrift, entitled, The Philosophy of Arithmetic Logische Untersuchungen Logical Investigations (1900-01; trans. 1970) was published in two parts, and is an introduction to his concept of phenomenology. Ideas: A General Introduction to Pure Phenomenology
    The ego cogito as transcendental subjectivity, in Cartesian Meditations In 1916 Husserl lost his son Wolfgang to WWI. He observed his son's death with a year of mourning and kept silent professionally. The war disrupted Husserl's teaching and involvement with his younger colleages.

    29. Edmund Husserl
    husserl saw phenomenology as a psychology that distinctly separated the physical from the psychical and concentrated its attention on the psychical.
    http://home.earthlink.net/~potterama/Michele/projects/hyper/husserl.html
    Edmund Husserl (1859-1938)
    The founder of the movement in literary criticism known as Phenomenology . Husserl saw phenomenology as a psychology that distinctly separated the physical from the psychical and concentrated its attention on the psychical. Husserl attempted to shift the focus of philosophy away from large scale theorization, towards a more precise study of discrete phenomena,ideas and simple events. He was interested in the essential structure of things, using eidetic analysis of intensionality to yield apodictic(necessary) truths. Husserl aided philosophy, breaking the Cartesian trap of dualism with new ideas like intentionality.
    History
    Born in the former Czechloslovakia, Husserl studied in Leipzig, Berlin and Vienna, where he also taught. He began his studies as a mathemetician, but his studies were influencedby Brentano, who moved him to study more psychology and philosophy. He wrote his first book in 1891, The Philosophy of Arithmetic . This book dealt mostly with mathematical issues, but his interests soon shifted. Husserl immersed himself in the study of logic from 1890-1900, and he soonafter produced another text: Logical Investigations Some of his major ideas of this era were intentionality, relations, and identity of things. He came to focus on perceptual experience, and as he began to shed his early Kantian ways, he wrote

    30. EpistemeLinks: Website Results For Philosopher Edmund Husserl
    General website search results for edmund husserl including brief biographies, link resources, and more. Provided by EpistemeLinks.
    http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/Philosophers.aspx?PhilCode=Huss

    31. Edmund Husserl -- Philosophy Books And Online Resources
    edmund husserl philosophy resources. Resources include biographies, commentaries, book reviews, new and used books by and about husserl and transcendental
    http://erraticimpact.com/~20thcentury/html/husserl.htm

    20th Century Index

    General Resources

    Women in Philosophy

    New Book Search
    ...
    Advertising
    Edmund Husserl
    Books Magazines Popular Music Classical Music DVD Video Video Games Computers Software Electronics Housewares Hardware Outdoor Living Toys Baby Gear
    The Essential Husserl : Basic Writings in Transcendental Phenomenology Studies in Continental Thought by Edmund Husserl , Donn Welton (Editor)
    Click here to learn more about this book

    Click here for more Husserl Books

    Click here for Phenomenology Books

    Click here for Ontology Books
    ...
    The Husserl Page
    Since nowhere in these pages will you find a synopsis, summary, or other such treatise on the phenomenology of Husserl, you may wish to jump to the chronological bibliography of Husserl's writings. Here you may look for citations of the various "introductions" to phenomenology by Husserl himself. The author of this Web site suggests Husserl's Encyclopedia Britannica article on phenomenology as a brief text representing well Husserl's major themes. It is perhaps the most concisely written of all the so-called "introductions." Finished in the years 1927-28 and (in a heavily edited and distorted version) published in the 14th ed. of

    32. Edmund Husserl (1859-1938)
    husserl, edmund (18591938), German philosopher, founder of phenomenology. husserl was born in Prossnitz, Moravia (now in the Czech Republic), on April 8,
    http://www.csun.edu/~vcoao087/husserl.htm
    Edmund Husserl (1859-1938)
    Husserl, Edmund (1859-1938), German philosopher, founder of phenomenology. Husserl was born in Prossnitz, Moravia (now in the Czech Republic), on April 8, 1859. He studied science, philosophy, and mathematics at the universities of Leipzig, Berlin, and Vienna and wrote his doctoral thesis on the calculus of variations. He became interested in the psychological basis of mathematics and, shortly after becoming a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Halle, wrote his first book, Philosophie der Arithmetik (1891). At that time he maintained that the truths of mathematics have validity regardless of the way people come to discover and believe in them. DEVELOPMENT OF PHENOMENOLOGY Husserl then argued against his early position, which he called psychologism, in Logical Investigations (1900-01; trans. 1970). In this book, regarded as a radical departure in philosophy, he contended that the philosopher's task is to contemplate the essences of things, and that the essence of an object can be arrived at by systematically varying that object in the imagination. Husserl noted that consciousness is always directed toward something. He called this directedness intentionality and argued that consciousness contains ideal, unchanging structures called meanings, which determine what object the mind is directed toward at any given time. During his tenure (1901-16) at the University of Göttingen, Husserl attracted many students, who began to form a distinct phenomenological school, and he wrote his most influential work

    33. Edmund Husserl — Infoplease.com
    edmund husserl and Eugen Fink Beginnings and Ends in Phenomenology 19281938.(Book review) (Journal of Phenomenological Psychology)
    http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0824633.html
    Site Map FAQ
    in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia Spelling Checker
    Daily Almanac for
    Jan 25, 2008
    Search White Pages
    • Skip Navigation Home Almanacs ... Word of the Day Editor's Favorites Search: Infoplease Info search tips Search: Biographies Bio search tips
      google_ad_client = 'pub-1894504138907931'; google_ad_width = 120; google_ad_height = 240; google_ad_format = '120x240_as'; google_ad_type = 'text'; google_ad_channel =''; google_color_border = ['336699','B4D0DC','DFF2FD','B0E0E6']; google_color_bg = ['FFFFFF','ECF8FF','DFF2FD','FFFFFF']; google_color_link = ['0000FF','0000CC','0000CC','000000']; google_color_url = ['008000','008000','008000','336699']; google_color_text = ['000000','6F6F6F','000000','333333']; Encyclopedia
      Husserl, Edmund
      Husserl, Edmund u rl) [ key , German philosopher, founder of the phenomenological movement (see phenomenology Logische Untersuchungen Ideas for a Pure Phenomenology (tr. 1952). See studies by P. Ricoeur (1967), M. Natanson (1973), J. Kockelmans, ed. (1967, repr. 1978), H. L. Dreyfus and H. Hall, ed. (1982), D. Willard (1984), and E. Levinas (1973, repr. 1985).

    34. Edmund Husserl
    Brysons.NetMichael Bryson. John Milton, Graduate School Horrors, Wine links, and writing by Michael.
    http://www.michaelbryson.net/academic/husserl.html
    Home Curriculum Vitae Milton Pages Writing ... Links Edmund Husserl Phenomenology
    There is an objective world , that is "really" out there; however, weas experiencing subjectsmust bracket, limit, and define that objective world.
    The phenomena is not the actual object, it is the impression of the object which passes through the mind.
    Phenomenology is therefore the study of those phenomena which pass through the mind.
    The world is always constituted by a collective, subjective genesis.
    Husserl distinguishes between the noetic that which experiences, the experiencing and the noematic that which is experienced, being experienced.
    The noetic is real and fundamental, while the noematic is dependent and, strictly speaking, unreal
    that which is perceived is constituted, insofar as it is perceived, by the perceiving subject.
    "

    35. Edmund Husserl
    Wallace Provost, Philosopher, Philosophy, Science, and Western culture.
    http://n4bz.org/gsr10/gsr1003.htm
    EDMUND HUSSERL
    It wasn't until the later nineteenth century that Germany became a country of any note. As Chancellor, Bismarck changed Germany from a backward nation to the most technologically advanced nation in Europe. He accomplished this with a total disregard of the social costs and treated his liberal opponents unmercifully. But he did in fact create a powerful Germany which was respected throughout Europe. We have already seen, in our discussions of the evolution of Western thought, how important the faith of a people in their own culture contributes to their faith in a source of truth. So, in the latter nineteenth century a German, Husserl, suggested that through Phenomenology, philosophy could become a science. By this he meant science in the ancient Greek meaning of the word, of knowledge of what cannot be different than it is. Phenomenology, Husserl said, can lead to a science that is not possible through natural philosophy because natural philosophy depends for all of its knowledge on knowledge of the existence of things in nature. In spite of the fact that physical being is not the only kind of being. Only the spatiotemporal world of bodies is nature in the significant sense of the word. All other being, i.e., the psychical, is nature in the secondary sense, a fact that determines basically essential differences between the methods of natural science and psychology. In principle, only corporeal being can be experienced in a number of direct experiences, i.e., perceptions, as individually identical. Hence, only this being can, if the perceptions are thought of as distributed among various "subjects," be experienced by many subjects as individually identical and be described as intersubjectively the same. The same realities (things, procedures, etc.) are present to the eyes of all and can be determined by all of us according to their "nature." Their "nature," however, denotes: presenting themselves in experience according to diversely varying "subjective appearances."

    36. Husserl, Edmund Gustav Albrecht
    Glossary of Religion and Philosophy Short Biography of edmund Gustav Albrecht husserl.
    http://atheism.about.com/library/glossary/general/bldef_husserl.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') You are here: About Agnosticism / Atheism Agnosticism / Atheism Atheism ... Help Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl Back to Last Page Glossary Index Related Terms phenomenology
    Name:
    Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl Dates:
    Born: April 8, 1859 in Prossnitz, Moravia
    Died: April 27, 1938 in Freiburg, Germany Specialization
    Phenomenology
    Epistemology Major Works
    Logical Investigations (1900)
    Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy (1913)
    Formal and Transcendental Logic (1929)
    Cartesian Meditations (1931) Biography: Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl was a German philosopher who is generally associated with the modern development of phenomenology (a term he coined) as he attempted to create out of it a pure, non-empirical science. Husserl's focus was simply to study the nature of consciousness and how a conscious person could be conscious of their own consciousness. Thus, he criticized traditional attempts to understand the use of language through experience, arguing that naturalism was of no value and that insight was the best method to use here. Also Known As: none Alternate Spellings: none Common Misspellings: none Related Resources: Biographies of Philosophers This index of biographical index of famous philosophers throughout history includes many others who have contributed to our understanding of human nature and life - including sociologists, psychologists, scientists, and more.

    37. Philosophy Cafe Archived Article
    edmund husserl is considered the founder of phenomenology, that is, the philosophical study of human consciousness. He developed a particular method for
    http://www.philosophersnet.com/cafe/archive_article.php?id=79&name=philosopher

    38. Husserl-Archives Leuven
    edmund husserl Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a edmund husserl On the Phenomenology of the Consciousness of Internal Time (1893 1917)
    http://www.hiw.kuleuven.be/hiw/eng/husserl/Collected.php
    @import "print.css"; @import "tableless.css";
    Husserl-Archives Leuven
    International Centre for Phenomenological Research
    Edmund Husserl Collected Works
    For further information see the publisher's webpage
  • Edmund Husserl Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy. Third Book: Phenomenology and the Foundation of the Sciences.
    Translated by Ted Klein and William Pohl. 1980. xviii + 130 pp.
    HB. ISBN 90-247-2093-1
    PB. ISBN 1-4020-0256-4 Edmund Husserl Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy. First Book: General Introduction to a Pure Phenomenology.
    Translated by Fred Kersten. 1982. xxiv + 402 pp.
    HB. ISBN 90-247-2503-8
    PB. ISBN 90-247-2852-5 Edmund Husserl Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy. Second Book: Studies in the Phenomenology of Constitution.
    Translated by R. Rojcewicz and A. Schuwer. 1989. xx + 440 pp.
  • 39. Husserliana: Edmund Husserl – Collected Works Journals, Books & Online Medi
    husserliana edmund husserl – Collected Works New Forthcoming Titles. edmund husserl (1859 - 1938) is one of the most influential philosophers of this
    http://www.springer.com/west/home/new & forthcoming titles (default)?SGWID=4-403

    40. Husserl's Inaugural Lecture At Freiburg Im Breisgau
    edmund husserl. Ladies and gentlemen, honored colleagues, dear comrades! 1 In all the areas within which the spiritual life of humanity is at work,
    http://www3.baylor.edu/~Scott_Moore/essays/Husserl.html
    Inaugural Lecture at Freiburg im Breisgau
    Pure Phenomenology, Its Method and Its Field of Investigation
    Edmund Husserl
    Ladies and gentlemen, honored colleagues, dear comrades!
    [1] In all the areas within which the spiritual life of humanity is at work, the historical epoch wherein fate has placed us is an epoch of stupendous happenings. Whatever previous generations cultivated by their toil and struggle into a harmonious whole, in every sphere of culture, whatever enduring style was deemed established as method and norm, is once more in flux and now seeks new forms whereby reason, as yet unsatisfied, may develop more freely: in politics, in economic life, in technics, in the fine arts, andby no means least of allin the sciences. In a few decades of reconstruction, even the mathematical natural sciences, the ancient archetypes of theoretical perfection, have changed habit completely!
    [2] Philosophy, too, fits into this picture. In philosophy, the forms whose energies were dissipated in the period following the overthrow of Hegelian philosophy were essentially those of a renaissance. They were forms that reclaimed past philosophies, and their methods as well as some of their essential content originated with great thinkers of the past.
    [3] Most recently, the need for an utterly original philosophy has re-emerged, the need of a philosophy thatin contrast to the secondary productivity of renaissance philosophiesseeks by radically clarifying the sense and the motifs of philosophical problems to penetrate to that primal ground on whose basis those problems must find whatever solution is genuinely scientific.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 68    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

    free hit counter