CONTENTS
1 Cover
5 Introduction What you will not find in this book Phenomenology now Why study phenomenology? Overview Notes on the second edition
6 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 Key terms Further reading
7 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 Key terms Further reading
8 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 Key terms Further reading
9 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 Key terms Further reading
10 5 Gestalt Psychology 5.1 Gestalt criticisms of atomistic psychology 5.2 Perception and the environment 5.3 Influence of Gestalt psychology Key terms Further reading
11 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 Key terms Further reading
12 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 Key terms Further reading
13 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 Key terms Further reading
14 9 Critical Phenomenology 9.1 The path not taken 9.2 Phenomenology and gender 9.3 Phenomenology and race 9.4 Conclusion Key terms Further reading
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