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· 분류 : 외국도서 > 인문/사회 > 철학 > 일반
· ISBN : 9781844650101
· 쪽수 : 302쪽
· 출판일 : 2011-05-01
목차
Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Chapter 1 Plato’s Socratic theory of eid? : the first pillar of the ancient precedent to pure phenomenology; Chapter 2 Plato’s arithmological theory of eid? : the second pillar of the ancient precedent to pure phenomenology; Chapter 3 Aristotle’s criticism of Plato’s theory of eid? : the third (and final) pillar of the ancient precedent to pure phenomenology; Chapter 4 Origin of the task of pure phenomenology; Chapter 5 Pure phenomenology and Platonism; Chapter 6 Pure phenomenology as the transcendental-phenomenological investigation of absolute consciousness; Chapter 7 Transcendental phenomenology of absolute consciousness and phenomenological philosophy; Chapter 8 Limits of the transcendental-phenomenological investigation of pure consciousness; Chapter 9 Phenomenological philosophy as transcendental idealism; Chapter 10 The intersubjective foundation of transcendental idealism: the immanent transcendency of the world’s objectivity; Chapter 11 The pure phenomenological motivation of Husserl’s turn to history; Chapter 12 The essential connection between intentional history and actual history; Chapter 13 The historicity of both the intelligibility of ideal meanings and the possibility of actual history; Chapter 14 Desedimentation and the link between intentional history and the constitution of a historical tradition; Chapter 15 Transcendental phenomenology as the only true explanation of objectivity and all meaningful problems in previous philosophy; Chapter 16 The methodological presupposition of the ontico-ontological critique of intentionality: Plato’s Socratic seeing of the eid? Chapter 17 The mereological presupposition of fundamental ontology: that Being as a whole has a meaning overall; Chapter 18 The presupposition behind the proto-deconstructive critique of intentional historicity: the conflation of; intra; subjective and; inter; subjective idealities; Chapter 19 The presupposition behind the deconstruction of phenomenology: the subordination of being to speech; Chapter 21 Coda;