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Hermeneutics and Reflection : Heidegger and Husserl on the Concept of Phenomenology.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: New Studies in Phenomenology and Hermeneutics SeriesPublisher: Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 2013Copyright date: ©2013Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (184 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781442670150
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Hermeneutics and ReflectionDDC classification:
  • 142/.7
LOC classification:
  • B829.5 .H4513 2000
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- Translator's Introduction -- Foreword -- Introduction -- 1. The Origin of Hermeneutic Phenomenology from within the Primordial Experience of the A-Theoretical -- 1. Philosophy as Primordial Science, Its Originary and Ownmost Problematic, and Its Genuine Methodological Attitude for Knowledge -- 2. The Discovery of the A- or Pre-Theoretical and the Requirement to Break the Dominance of the Theoretical -- 3. Hermeneutic-Phenomenological Disclosing of the Lived-Experience of the Surrounding World -- (a) Lived-Experience of the Surrounding World in the Theoretical-Reflective Attitude (Husserl) -- (b) Lived-Experience of the Surrounding World in the A-Theoretical Attitude (Heidegger) -- 4. Lived-Experience as Happening or as What Passes By -- 5. Obsession with the Theoretical as Hindrance for Insight into the Domain of Living-Experience of the Surrounding World -- 6. The How of Phenomenological Disclosure of the Domain of Lived-Experience -- (a) Husserl's Method of Descriptive Reflection -- (b) Heidegger's Method of Hermeneutic Understanding -- 7. The Phenomenological "Principle of Principles" -- (a) Reflective-Phenomenological Intuition (Husserl) -- (b) Hermeneutic-Phenomenological In-tuition (Heidegger) -- 2. Husserl-Heidegger and "the Things Themselves" -- 1. The Phenomenological Maxim "To the Things Themselves" and Overcoming Prejudice -- 2. Consciousness and Preoccupation with Cognized Cognition -- 3. Preoccupation with Certitude and the Deformation of Phenomenological Findings -- 4. Preoccupation with the Disclosure of Dasein Itself -- 3. Hermeneutic Phenomenology of Dasein and Reflective Phenomenology of Consciousness -- 1. Hermeneutic Phenomenology in Being and Time -- 2. Phenomenology as Way of Treatment (First Methodological Principle).
(a) The Formal Concept of Phenomenology in Husserl and in Heidegger -- (b) The Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenology to the Ordinary (Positivist-Scientific) Concept of Phenomenology -- (c) The Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenology to the Phenomenological (Philosophical) Concept of Phenomenology -- (α) Heidegger's Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenon in the Direction of the Being of Beings: Self-Related-Ecstatic-Horizonal Disclosure of Being -- (β) Husserl's Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenon in the Direction of the Pure, viz.,Transcendental Life of Consciousness -- (γ) The Phenomenological Phenomena of Husserl and Those of Heidegger -- 3. Phenomenology as Method of Access to the Thematic Field of Investigation (Second Methodological Principle) -- (a) Heidegger's Three Methodological Directives -- (b) Husserl's Fundamental Method -- 4. Hermeneutic and Reflective Logos -- General Index -- Index of German Words.
Summary: Von Hermann's Hermeneutics and Reflection, translated here from the original German, represents the most fundamental and critical reflection in any language of the concept of phenomenology as it was used by Heidegger and by Husserl.
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Cover -- Contents -- Translator's Introduction -- Foreword -- Introduction -- 1. The Origin of Hermeneutic Phenomenology from within the Primordial Experience of the A-Theoretical -- 1. Philosophy as Primordial Science, Its Originary and Ownmost Problematic, and Its Genuine Methodological Attitude for Knowledge -- 2. The Discovery of the A- or Pre-Theoretical and the Requirement to Break the Dominance of the Theoretical -- 3. Hermeneutic-Phenomenological Disclosing of the Lived-Experience of the Surrounding World -- (a) Lived-Experience of the Surrounding World in the Theoretical-Reflective Attitude (Husserl) -- (b) Lived-Experience of the Surrounding World in the A-Theoretical Attitude (Heidegger) -- 4. Lived-Experience as Happening or as What Passes By -- 5. Obsession with the Theoretical as Hindrance for Insight into the Domain of Living-Experience of the Surrounding World -- 6. The How of Phenomenological Disclosure of the Domain of Lived-Experience -- (a) Husserl's Method of Descriptive Reflection -- (b) Heidegger's Method of Hermeneutic Understanding -- 7. The Phenomenological "Principle of Principles" -- (a) Reflective-Phenomenological Intuition (Husserl) -- (b) Hermeneutic-Phenomenological In-tuition (Heidegger) -- 2. Husserl-Heidegger and "the Things Themselves" -- 1. The Phenomenological Maxim "To the Things Themselves" and Overcoming Prejudice -- 2. Consciousness and Preoccupation with Cognized Cognition -- 3. Preoccupation with Certitude and the Deformation of Phenomenological Findings -- 4. Preoccupation with the Disclosure of Dasein Itself -- 3. Hermeneutic Phenomenology of Dasein and Reflective Phenomenology of Consciousness -- 1. Hermeneutic Phenomenology in Being and Time -- 2. Phenomenology as Way of Treatment (First Methodological Principle).

(a) The Formal Concept of Phenomenology in Husserl and in Heidegger -- (b) The Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenology to the Ordinary (Positivist-Scientific) Concept of Phenomenology -- (c) The Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenology to the Phenomenological (Philosophical) Concept of Phenomenology -- (α) Heidegger's Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenon in the Direction of the Being of Beings: Self-Related-Ecstatic-Horizonal Disclosure of Being -- (β) Husserl's Deformalization of the Formal Concept of Phenomenon in the Direction of the Pure, viz.,Transcendental Life of Consciousness -- (γ) The Phenomenological Phenomena of Husserl and Those of Heidegger -- 3. Phenomenology as Method of Access to the Thematic Field of Investigation (Second Methodological Principle) -- (a) Heidegger's Three Methodological Directives -- (b) Husserl's Fundamental Method -- 4. Hermeneutic and Reflective Logos -- General Index -- Index of German Words.

Von Hermann's Hermeneutics and Reflection, translated here from the original German, represents the most fundamental and critical reflection in any language of the concept of phenomenology as it was used by Heidegger and by Husserl.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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