• Genshogaku-teki na Imi no Riron: Husserl kara Ingarden made
    Gendai Shiso (The Review of Contemporary Thought) 37 (16): 66-88. 2009.
    This is a japanese translation of Arkadiusz Chrudzimski, "Von Brentano zu Ingarden. Die phänomenologische Bedeutungslehre", Husserl Studies 18 (2002), 3, pp. 185-208.
  •  30
    Die Erkenntnistheorie von Roman Ingarden
    Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1999.
    Das Buch ist eine analytische Darstellung der Hauptideen der Erkenntnistheorie Ingardens. Es basiert zum größten Teil auf dem bis vor kurzem noch unpublizierten bzw. ausschließlich in polnischer Sprache verfaßten Material und wendet sich vor allem an die Phänomenologen aber auch an die analytischen Philosophen, die sich für die Erkenntnistheorie und Ontologie der Intentionalität interessieren. Die Ingardensche Erkenntnistheorie, seine Theorie der Intentionalität und die Hauptzüge seiner Ontologi…Read more
  • Brentano's Late Ontology
    Brentano Studien 10 221-236. 2002.
    In the present paper I want to give an interpretation of Brentano's late, nominalistic ontology. There are two aspects of this theory: the conception of individual properties containing their substances, presented mainly in the fragments collected in Brentano's Theory of Categories and the conceptualistic reduction virtually involved in Brentano's definition of truth.
  •  46
    The Young Leśniewski on Existential Propositions
    In Arkadiusz Chrudzimski & Dariusz Lukasiewicz (eds.), Actions, Products, and Things: Brentano and Polish Philosophy, De Gruyter. pp. 107-120. 2006.
    It was one of Brentano’s central ideas that all judgements are at bottom existential. In his Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint he tried to show how all traditionally acknowledged judgement forms could be reinterpreted as existential statements. Existential propositions, therefore, were a central concern for the whole Brentano School. Kazimierz Twardowski, who also accepted this program, introduced the problem of the existential reduction to his Polish students, but not all of them found th…Read more
  •  122
    Truth, Concept Empiricism, and the Realism of Polish Phenomenology
    Polish Journal of Philosophy 2 (1): 23-34. 2008.
    The majority of Polish phenomenologists never found Husserl’s transcendental idealism attractive. In this paper I investigate the source of this rather surprising realist attitude. True enough the founder of Polish phenomenology was Roman Ingarden - one of the most severe critics of Husserl’s transcendental idealism, so it is initially tempting to reduce the whole issue to this sociological fact. However, I argue that there must be something more about Ingarden’s intellectual background that imm…Read more
  •  31
    Meinong und supervaluation
    In Arkadiusz Chrudzimski & Wolfgang Huemer (eds.), Phenomenology & Analysis: Essays in Central European Philosophy, De Gruyter. pp. 105-130. 2004.
  •  69
    Studien zur Phänomenologie von Brentano bis Ingarden Arkadiusz Chrudzimski. Husserl, Edmund 1908. Vorlesungen über Bedeutungslehre. Sommersemester I 908 (Husserliana XXVI, hrsg. von U. Panzer), Dordrecht/Boston/Lancaster 1987...
  •  134
    Die theorie der intentionalität meinongs
    Dialectica 55 (2). 2001.
    The most striking feature of Meinong's theory of intentionality is his thesis that every mental act has its reference‐object “beyond being and non being”. This theory seems, at first, to be a clear example of the so called object‐theory of intentionality, as it introduces special “postulated” entities in the target‐position of the mental act. Closer examination, however, reveals in Meinong's works important elements of the mediator‐theory. Meinong speaks of auxiliary incomplete objects situated …Read more
  •  94
    Brentano, Marty, and Meinong on Emotions and Values
    In W. Huemer & B. Centi (eds.), Value and Ontology, Ontos-verlag. pp. 12--171. 2009.
    At least since Hume we have a serious problem with explaining our moral valuations. Most of us – with notable exception of certain (in)famous esoteric thinkers like Nietzsche or De Sade – share a common intuition that our moral claims are in an important sense objective. We believe that they can be right or wrong; and we believe that if they happen to be right, then they are binding for each human being conducting a similar action in similar circumstances. Now Hume drew our attention to the fact…Read more