Edition |
Second edition. |
Description |
xi, 278 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 24 cm |
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text txt rdacontent |
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unmediated n rdamedia |
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volume nc rdacarrier |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Note |
"First published in 2015". |
Summary |
"The much-anticipated second edition of this celebrated introduction to phenomenology"-- Provided by publisher. |
Contents |
Detailed contents -- Acnkowledgments -- Figures -- 1. Immanuel Kant: eighteenth- and nineteenth-century background -- 1.1. Kant's critical philosophy -- 1.2. Intuitions and concepts -- 1.3. The transcendental deduction -- 1.4. Kantian themes in phenomenology -- 2. The rise of experimental psychology -- 2.1. Wilhelm Wundt and the rise of scientific psychology -- 2.2. William James and functionalism -- 2.3. The structuralism - functionalism debate -- 3. Edmund Husserl and transcendental phenomenology -- 3.1. Transcendental phenomenology -- 3.2. Franz Brentano -- 3.3. Between logic and psychology -- 3.4. Ideas -- 3.5. The body -- 3.6. Phenomenology of time consciousness -- 4. Martin Heidegger and existential phenomenology -- 4.1. The intelligibility of the everyday world -- 4.2. Descartes and occurrentness -- 4.3. Being-in-the-world -- 4.4. Being-with others and the anyone -- 4.5. The existential conception of the self -- 4.6. Death, guilt, and authenticity -- 5. Gestalt psychology -- 5.1. Gestalt criticisms of atomistic psychology -- 5.2. Perception and the environment -- 5.3. Influence of Gestalt psychology -- 6. Aron Gurwitsch: merging Gestalt psychology and phenomenology -- 6.1. Phenomenology of thematics and of the pure ego -- 6.2. Others and the social world -- 7. Jean-Paul Sartre: phenomenological existentialism -- 7.1. The transcendence of the ego -- 7.2. The imagination and the imaginary -- 7.3. Being and nothingness -- 8. Maurice Merleau-Ponty: the body and perception -- 8.1. Phenomenology of perception -- 8.2. Phenomenology, psychology, and the phenomenal field -- 8.3. The lived body -- 8.4. Perceptual constancy and natural objects -- 9. Critical phenomenology -- 9.1. The path not taken -- 9.2. Phenomenology and gender -- 9.3. Phenomenology and race -- 9.4. Conclusion -- 10. James J. Gibson and ecological psychology -- 10.1. Gibson's early work: two examples -- 10.2. The ecological approach -- 10.3. Ecological ontology -- 10.4. Affordances and invitations -- 11. Hubert Dreyfus and the phenomenological critique of cognitivism -- 11.1. The cognitive revolution and cognitive science -- 11.2. "Alchemy and artificial intelligence" -- 11.3. What computers can't do -- 11.4. Heideggerian artificial intelligence -- 12. Enactivism and the embodied mind -- 12.1. Embodied, embedded, extended, enactive -- 12.2. The original enactivism -- 12.3. Other enactivisms: the sensorimotor approach and radical enactivism -- 12.4. Enactivism as a philosophy of nature -- 13. Phenomenological cognitive science -- 13.1. The frame problem -- 13.2. Radical embodied cognitive science -- 13.3. Dynamical systems theory -- 13.4. Heideggerian cognitive science -- 13.5. The future of scientific phenomenology -- References -- Index |
Subject |
Phenomenology.
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Phenomenology. (OCoLC)fst01060522
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Added Author |
Chemero, Anthony, 1969- author.
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ISBN |
9781509540655 (hardcover) |
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1509540652 (hardcover) |
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9781509540662 (paperback) |
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1509540660 (paperback) |
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9781509540679 (electronic publication) |
Standard No. |
40030656658 |
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