•  1
    Roman Ingarden. Ontology from a Phenomenological Point of View
    Reports on Philosophy 22 121-142. 2004.
    Ontology is doubtless the most important part of Roman Ingarden’s (1893-1970) philosophy. Contrary to Husserl, Ingarden always believed that any serious philosophical investigation must involve an ontological basis and he tried to formulate a solid ontological framework for his philosophy. There are several reasons why this ontology deserves our attention. For those who are interested in Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology, Ingarden’s ontology could be treated as an ingenious attempt to analy…Read more
  •  75
    Intentionalitätstheorie beim frühen Brentano
    Kluwer Academic Publishers. 2001.
    The book is an analytic exposition of Brentano's early theory of intentionality. In spite of the immense influence of this theory it is the first separate monograph on this topic. The book is based in great part on the unpublished manuscripts where one can find substantially better articulated formulations then those expressed in the already published `standard' works. Our analysis concentrates mainly on the ontological and epistemological problems of Brentano's immanent object. We highlight an …Read more
  • Logiczna forma świata: Kant i Wittgenstein
    Studia Philosophiae Christianae 30 (1): 7-20. 1994.
  •  47
    Die Ontologie Franz Brentanos
    Kluwer Academic Publishers. 2004.
    Das Buch bietet die erste systematische esamtdarstellung der Ontologie Brentanos. Es zeigt, daß es in Brentanos ontologischem Denken drei Perioden gibt: die frühe "konzeptualistische" (1862-1874), die mittlere "deskriptiv-psychologische" (1874-1904) und die späte "reistische" (1904-1917). Diese drei Perioden werden in ihrer Kontinuität und komplizierten Dialektik unter Rückgriff auf unveröffentlichte Manuskripte Brentanos dargestellt. Dabei wird von dem logischen Handwerkszeug der zeitgenössisch…Read more
  •  130
    Ingarden’s official ontology of states of affairs is by no means reductionist. According to him there are states of affairs, but they are ontologically dependent onother entities. There are certain classical arguments for the introduction of states of affairs as extra entities over and above the nominal objects, that can be labelled “the problem of composition,” “the problem of relation” and “the problem of negation.” To the first two Ingarden proposes rather traditional solutions, while his tre…Read more
  • Teoria intencjonalności i umysłu Johna R. Searle'a
    Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 14 (2): 73-83. 1995.
  •  180
    Varieties of intentional objects
    Semiotica 2013 (194): 189-206. 2013.
    In this paper I propose a certain classification of entities which are introduced in various theories of intentionality under the label ‘intentional objects’. Franz Brentano’s immanent objects, Alexius Meinong’s entities ‘beyond being and non-being’, or Roman Ingarden’s purely intentional objects can serve as examples of such entities. What they all have in common is that they have been introduced in order to extensionalise the so called ‘intentional contexts’ (‘intentional’ with ‘t’). But not a…Read more
  •  126
    Meinong’s Version of the Description Theory
    Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 27 (1): 73-85. 2007.
    About 1904 Meinong formulated his most famous idea: there are no empty (non-referential) terms. Russell also did not accept non-referential singular terms, but in “On Denoting” he claimed that all singular terms that are apparently empty could be explained away as apparent singular terms. However, if we take a more careful look at both theories, the picture becomes more complex. It is well known that Russell’s concept of a genuine proper name is very technical; but this is also true of Meinong. …Read more
  •  149
    Negative States of Affairs: Reinach versus Ingarden
    Symposium. The Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy 16 (2): 106-127. 2012.
    In Reinach’s works one finds a very rich ontology of states of affairs. Some of them are positive, some negative. Some of them obtain, some do not. But even the negative and non-obtaining states of affairs are absolutely independent of any mental activity. Now in spite of this claim of the “ontological equality” of positive and negative states of affairs there are, according to Reinach, massive epistemological differences in our cognitive access to them. Positive states of affairs could be direc…Read more
  •  37
    Enduring States
    In Christian Kanzian (ed.), Persistence, De Gruyter. pp. 19-32. 2007.
    The problem of how a concrete individual survives changes of its properties has long divided the philosophical community into ‘enduratists’ and ‘perduratists’. Enduratists take the idea of a surviving individual ontologi-cally seriously. They claim that many objects we encounter in our every-day (and for that matter also scientific) life endure in time, which means that these entities are wholly present at any time at which they exist. For those who are in principle happy with the conceptual fra…Read more
  •  107
    Ingarden on Modes of Being
    In Bruno Leclercq, Sebastien Richard & Denis Seron (eds.), Objects and Pseudo-Objects: Ontological Deserts and Jungles from Brentano to Carnap, De Gruyter. pp. 199-222. 2015.