UID:
edocfu_9959243484602883
Format:
1 online resource (184 p.)
ISBN:
1-4426-7015-0
,
1-4426-6913-6
Series Statement:
New Studies in Phenomenology and Hermeneutics
Uniform Title:
Hermeneutik und Reflexion.
Content:
Annotation
Note:
Originally published: Hermeneutik und Reflexion : der Begriff der Phänomenologie bei Heidegger und Husserl / Friedrich-Wilhelm v. Herrmann. -- Frankfurt am Main : V. Klostermann, 2000.
,
Cover; Contents; Translator's Introduction; Foreword; Introduction; 1. The Origin of Hermeneutic Phenomenology from within the Primordial Experience of the A-Theoretical; Â 1. Philosophy as Primordial Science, Its Originary and Ownmost Problematic, and Its Genuine Methodological Attitude for Knowledge; Â 2. The Discovery of the A- or Pre-Theoretical and the Requirement to Break the Dominance of the Theoretical; Â 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; Â 1. Hermeneutic Phenomenology in Being and Time; Â 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.
,
Issued also in print.
,
English
Additional Edition:
ISBN 1-4875-4764-1
Additional Edition:
ISBN 1-4426-4009-X
Language:
English
Keywords:
Electronic books.
DOI:
10.3138/9781442670150
Bookmarklink