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Books > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Modern Western philosophy, c 1600 to the present > Western philosophy, from c 1900 -
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Taste
(Paperback)
Andrea Pavoni, Danilo Mandic, Caterina Nirta
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R631
Discovery Miles 6 310
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Horst Ruthrof revisits Husserl's phenomenology of language and
highlights his late writings as essential to understanding the full
range of his ideas. Focusing on the idea of language as imaginable
as well as the role of a speech community in constituting it,
Ruthrof provides a powerful re-assessment of his methodological
phenomenology. From the Logical Investigations to untranslated
portions of his Nachlass, Ruthrof charts all the developments and
amendments in his theorizations. Ruthrof argues that it is the
intersubjective character to linguistic meaning that is so
emblematic of Husserl's position. Bringing his study up to the
present day, Ruthrof discusses mental time travel, the evolution of
language, and protosyntax in the context of Husserl's late
writings, progressing a comprehensive new phenomenological ontology
of language with wide-ranging implications for philosophy,
linguistics, and cultural studies.
Russian Philosophy in the Twenty-First Century: An Anthology
provides the English-speaking world with access to post-Soviet
philosophic thought in Russia for the first time. The Anthology
presents the fundamental range of contemporary philosophical
problems in the works of prominent Russian thinkers. In contrast to
the "single-mindedness" of Soviet-era philosophers and the bias
toward Orthodox Christianity of emigre philosophers, it offers to
its readers the authors' plurality of different positions in widely
diverse texts. Here one finds strictly academic philosophical works
and those in an applied, pragmatic format-secular and
religious-that are dedicated to complex social and political
matters, to pressing cultural topics or insights into international
terrorism, as well as to contemporary science and global
challenges.
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Faint Not
(Hardcover)
Steven De Lay
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R696
R615
Discovery Miles 6 150
Save R81 (12%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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When our smartphones distract us, much more is at stake than a
momentary lapse of attention. Our use of smartphones can interfere
with the building-blocks of meaningfulness and the actions that
shape our self-identity. By analyzing social interactions and
evolving experiences, Roholt reveals the mechanisms of
smartphone-distraction that impact our meaningful projects and
activities. Roholt's conception of meaning in life draws from a
disparate group of philosophers - Susan Wolf, John Dewey, Hubert
Dreyfus, Martin Heidegger, and Albert Borgmann. Central to Roholt's
argument are what Borgmann calls focal practices: dinners with
friends, running, a college seminar, attending sporting events. As
a recurring example, Roholt develops the classification of musical
instruments as focal things, contending that musical performance
can be fruitfully understood as a focal practice. Through this
exploration of what generates meaning in life, Roholt makes us
rethink the place we allow smartphones to occupy in the everyday.
But he remains cautiously optimistic. This thoughtful, needed
interrogation of smartphones shows how we can establish a positive
role for technologies within our lives.
This book compiles James L. Cox's most important writings on a
phenomenology of Indigenous Religions into one volume, with a new
introduction and conclusion by the author. Cox has consistently
exemplified phenomenological methods by applying them to his own
field studies among Indigenous Religions, principally in Zimbabwe
and Alaska, but also in Australia and New Zealand. Included in this
collection are his articles in which he defines what he means by
the category 'religion' and how this informs his precise meaning of
the classification 'Indigenous Religions'. These theoretical
considerations are always illustrated clearly and concisely by
specific studies of Indigenous Religions and their dynamic
interaction with contemporary political and social circumstances.
This collection demonstrates the continued relevance of the
phenomenological method in the study of religions by presenting the
method as dynamic and adaptable to contemporary social contexts and
as responsive to intellectual critiques of the method.
This volume, edited by Lucilla Guidi and Thomas Rentsch,
establishes the first systematic connection between phenomenology
and performativity. On the one hand, it outlines the performativity
of phenomenology by exploring its enactment and the transformation
of attitude it effects; this exploration is conducted through a
number of parallels between phenomenology and the ancient
understanding of philosophy as an exercise and a way of life. On
the other hand, the volume examines different notions of
performativity from a phenomenological perspective, so as to show
that a phenomenological understanding of embodied experience
complements a linguistic account of performativity and can also
offer a ground for bodily practices of resistance, critique, and
self-transformation in our own day and age.
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