Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Modern Western philosophy, c 1600 to the present > Western philosophy, from c 1900 - > Phenomenology & Existentialism
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Ingardeniana II - New Studies in the Philosophy of Roman Ingarden With a New International Ingarden Bibliography (Hardcover, 1990 ed.)
Loot Price: R4,532
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Ingardeniana II - New Studies in the Philosophy of Roman Ingarden With a New International Ingarden Bibliography (Hardcover, 1990 ed.)
Series: Analecta Husserliana, 30
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This Ingardenia volume is the second in the Analecta Husserliana
series that is entirely devoted to the phenomenology of Roman
Ingarden. The first was volume IV (1976). Twenty years after
Ingarden's death, this volume demonstrates that the Polish
phenomenologist's contribution to philosophy and literary
scholarship has received world-wide attention. His ideas have
proven especially fruitful for the definition of the structure of
the literary work of art and the subsequent recognition of its
characteristic features. Of all the early phenomenologists who were
students of Husserl, it is Ingarden whose work has faithfully
pursued the original tenet that language "holds" the essence of the
life-world "in readiness" (bereit halten). To investigate this
premise with the rigor of a science, as Husserl had envisioned for
phenomenology, was Ingarden's life work. That Ingarden did not
quite reach his ambitious goal does not diminish his unquestionable
achievement. The understanding of the nature of the literary work
of art has increased enormously because of his analyses and
aesthetics. The Polish phenomenologist investigated above all the
work of art as a structure of necessary components which define and
determine its nature. That the artistic ingredient was shortchanged
under those conditions should not be surprising, particu larly
since Ingarden usually kept a purist's philosophical distance from
the concrete detail of the material under consideration. He was not
concerned with individual works of art but with the principle that
was shared by all of them as the defining feature of their being."
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