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Crisis and Husserlian phenomenology : a reflection on awakened subjectivity

By: Knies, Kenneth.
Publisher: 2022 Bloomsbury Academic, LondonDescription: viii, 248 p. ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9781350201378.Subject(s): Subjectivity | Ability-in-principle | Cogito | Dream skepticism | Existential responsibility | Greece | Identiy | Life-attitude | Naivete | Objectivism | Pragmatic illusion | Relativism | Seriousness | Transcendental motif | Wakefulness | Wishful thinking | WorldinessDDC classification: 142.7 Summary: Shedding new light on the theme of "crisis" in Husserl's phenomenology, this book reflects on the experience of awakening to one's own naïveté. Beginning from everyday examples, Knies examines how this awakening makes us culpable for not having noticed what was noticeable. He goes on to apply this examination to fundamental issues in phenomenology, arguing that the appropriation of naïve life has a different structure from the reflection on pre-reflective life. Husserl's work on the "crisis" is presented as an attempt to integrate this appropriation into a systematic transcendental philosophy. Crisis and Husserlian Phenomenology brings Husserl into dialogue with other key thinkers in Continental philosophy such as Descartes, Kant, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty and Derrida. It is suitable for students and scholars alike, especially those interested in subjectivity, responsibility and the philosophy of history.
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Books 142.7 KNI (Browse shelf) Available 033793

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Shedding new light on the theme of "crisis" in Husserl's phenomenology, this book reflects on the experience of awakening to one's own naïveté. Beginning from everyday examples, Knies examines how this awakening makes us culpable for not having noticed what was noticeable. He goes on to apply this examination to fundamental issues in phenomenology, arguing that the appropriation of naïve life has a different structure from the reflection on pre-reflective life. Husserl's work on the "crisis" is presented as an attempt to integrate this appropriation into a systematic transcendental philosophy. Crisis and Husserlian Phenomenology brings Husserl into dialogue with other key thinkers in Continental philosophy such as Descartes, Kant, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty and Derrida. It is suitable for students and scholars alike, especially those interested in subjectivity, responsibility and the philosophy of history.

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