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This book presents the origins of Central and Eastern European
phenomenology. It features chapters that explore the movement's
development, its most important thinkers, and its theoretical and
historical context. This collection examines such topics as the
realism-idealism controversy, the status of descriptive psychology,
the question of the phenomenological method, and the problem of the
world. The chapters span the first decades of the development of
phenomenology in Czechoslovakia, Poland, Romania, Russia, and
Yugoslavia before World War II. The contributors track the
Brentanian heritage of the development. They show how this
tradition inspired influential thinkers like Celms, Spet, Ingarden,
Frank, Twardowski, Patocka, and others. The book also puts forward
original investigations. Moreover it elaborates new accounts of the
foundations of phenomenology. While the volume begins with the
Brentanian heritage, it situates phenomenology in a dialogue with
other important schools of thought of that time, including the
Prague School and Lvov-Warsaw School of Logic. This collection
highlights thinkers whose writings have had only a limited
reception outside their home countries due to political and
historical circumstances. It will help readers gain a better
understanding of how the phenomenological movement developed beyond
its start in Germany. Readers will also come to see how the
phenomenological method resonated in different countries and led to
new philosophical developments in ontology, epistemology,
psychology, philosophy of culture, and philosophy of religion.
This book presents the origins of Central and Eastern European
phenomenology. It features chapters that explore the movement's
development, its most important thinkers, and its theoretical and
historical context. This collection examines such topics as the
realism-idealism controversy, the status of descriptive psychology,
the question of the phenomenological method, and the problem of the
world. The chapters span the first decades of the development of
phenomenology in Czechoslovakia, Poland, Romania, Russia, and
Yugoslavia before World War II. The contributors track the
Brentanian heritage of the development. They show how this
tradition inspired influential thinkers like Celms, Spet, Ingarden,
Frank, Twardowski, Patocka, and others. The book also puts forward
original investigations. Moreover it elaborates new accounts of the
foundations of phenomenology. While the volume begins with the
Brentanian heritage, it situates phenomenology in a dialogue with
other important schools of thought of that time, including the
Prague School and Lvov-Warsaw School of Logic. This collection
highlights thinkers whose writings have had only a limited
reception outside their home countries due to political and
historical circumstances. It will help readers gain a better
understanding of how the phenomenological movement developed beyond
its start in Germany. Readers will also come to see how the
phenomenological method resonated in different countries and led to
new philosophical developments in ontology, epistemology,
psychology, philosophy of culture, and philosophy of religion.
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