Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Modern Western philosophy, c 1600 to the present > Western philosophy, from c 1900 - > Phenomenology & Existentialism
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Pictures, Quotations, and Distinctions - Fourteen Essays in Phenomenology (Paperback)
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Pictures, Quotations, and Distinctions - Fourteen Essays in Phenomenology (Paperback)
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One of the major contributions of Husserl's phenomenology has been
to show that things present themselves to us in strikingly
different ways. There are various kinds of presentations and
something like logical structures in them that allow the truth of
things to appear. Being pictured is different from being named, and
also different from being distinguished from something else. The
fourteen essays in this volume provide concrete and colorful
examples of strategic forms of presentation, and they also shed
light on us as persons who exercise our intelligence when we let
things appear in these various ways. Even our moral conduct takes
place because something appears to us as to be done or to be
avoided in a situation that calls for action. When we quote what
someone has said, for example, we express things as they have been
expressed by someone else, and we invoke the authority of that
other speaker. In measurement, we either bring external units, such
as inches or yards, to determine the "how much" of things; or we
engage in "internal measurement" and use one part of the object to
determine the size of the whole. In moral action, the deep core of
what we do involves either benevolence or malevolence, and in such
conduct we shape or confirm ourselves as good or bad. Even the
timing of things, the measurement of their motions and the
determination of their before and after, in both clock and calendar
time, cannot take place without the involvement of the person's own
interwoven perceptions, remembrances, and anticipations, all held
together by the underlying flow of personal as well as worldly
temporality. The essays in this book are an attempt to blend the
philosophical approaches of Aristotle and Husserl, the classical
and the modern, to help us appreciate what Aristotle called "being
as the true," and to show how the human person is involved in this
enterprise.
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