Поиск по каталогу |
(строгое соответствие)
|
- Профессиональная
- Научно-популярная
- Художественная
- Публицистика
- Детская
- Искусство
- Хобби, семья, дом
- Спорт
- Путеводители
- Блокноты, тетради, открытки
Convergent Phenomenology and Edith Stein's Philosophical Eidetics. Essays on Emergent Self-Consciousness in the Systems of Sankara, Aquinas, and Husserl
В наличии
Местонахождение: Алматы | Состояние экземпляра: новый |
Бумажная
версия
версия
Автор: Jim Ruddy
ISBN: 9783659660078
Год издания: 2014
Формат книги: 60×90/16 (145×215 мм)
Количество страниц: 124
Издательство: LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
Цена: 30322 тг
Положить в корзину
Способы доставки в город Алматы * комплектация (срок до отгрузки) не более 2 рабочих дней |
Самовывоз из города Алматы (пункты самовывоза партнёра CDEK) |
Курьерская доставка CDEK из города Москва |
Доставка Почтой России из города Москва |
Аннотация: From the FOREWORD to this book by J. N. MOHANTY: "It is undoubtedly a great pleasure to read a competent work in which three of the greatest philosophers of the world—Aquinas, Sankara and Husserl—are treated with equal respect, their philosophies 'synthesized,' as a result of which a new interpretation of Husserl is just on the verge of emerging...Ruddy does take out a part from the Aristotle-Aquinas heritage—the theory of real relations, of relations which are asymmetrical, real from one side and intentional from another, and embeds it in Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology. The result is what the author calls “convergent phenomenology” embodying the truth that Husserlian pure object consciousness points beyond itself to the pure subject consciousness of God as He is in Himself. With this finding, the theme of ‘God’ is drawn into, and limits, transcendental phenomenology. I hope this faithful re-interpretation of Husserlian phenomenology will receive the close attention of Husserl scholars and of phenomenologists that it deserves."
Ключевые слова: Aquinas, Aristotle, Comparative Philosophy, Edith Stein, Heidegger, Husserl, Levinas, Parmenides, Phenomenology, Relation, Thomism, convergent phenomenology, Sankara, Sara Grant, J N Mohanty, Poinsot, phantom limb