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Subject as a moral person. Towards Husserl's late reflections on the concept of personFilozofia 63 (4): 365-373. 2008.
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7Review of The Husserl Dictionary (review)By Dermot Moran and Joseph Cohen Continuum, 2012. Pp. vi + 376. ISBN 978-1-8470-6463-9. £18.99 (pbk). Dermot Moran and Joseph Cohen, both from University College Dublin, have co-written a dictionar...
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50Review essay: Two themes of Husserl's phenomenology revisited: Responsibility and intersubjectivityContinental Philosophy Review 32 (1): 89-99. 1999.
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33This article is a novel assessment of Hermann Cohen’s theoretical philosophy, starting out from his Kant interpretation. Hermann Cohen was the head and founder of the Marburg School of Neo- Kantianism. In the beginning, hence, I will commence with some initial reflections on the makeup and importance of this school, before I move on to Cohen’s revolutionary Kant interpretation and its ramification for the Marburg School in general.
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39Reconstruction and reduction: Natorp and Husserl on method and the question of subjectivityIn Rudolf A. Makkreel & Sebastian Luft (eds.), Neo-Kantianism in Contemporary Philosophy, Indiana University Press. 2009.
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38Philosophical Historiography in Marburg Neo-Kantianism: The Example of Cassirer’s ErkenntnisproblemIn Valentin Pluder & Gerald Hartung (eds.), From Hegel to Windelband: Historiography of Philosophy in the 19th Century, De Gruyter. pp. 181-206. 2015.
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8Quelques problèmes fondamentaux dans les textes tardifs de Husserl sur la réduction phénomenologiqueRecherches Husserliennes 20 3-26. 2003.
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“Phänomenologie der Phänomenologie”: Systematik und Methodologie der Phänomenologie in der Auseinandersetzung zwischen Husserl und FinkTijdschrift Voor Filosofie 65 (4): 754-757. 2002.
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18Phenomenology and Embodiment: Husserl and the Constitution of Subjectivity (review)Review of Metaphysics 69 (2): 415-418. 2015.
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16Phenomenology as First Philosophy: A PrehistoryIn Herausgeber (ed.), PHILOSOPHY PHENOMENOLOGY SCIENCES, . pp. 107-133. 2010.When Husserl explicitly construed his phenomenology as first philosophy, he knew that he was placing himself into a long tradition in Western philosophy.1 One can witness the emergence of this project of phenomenology as first philosophy already in the first decade...
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17Natorp, Husserl und das Problem der Kontinuität von Leben, Wissenschaft und PhilosophiePhänomenologische Forschungen 21 99-134. 2006.In this paper I compare and contrast Natorp’s and Husserl’s philosophies as to their programmatic and systematic profiles. I will begin by giving an assessment of their relationship and mutual influence, something that many scholars believe had been done exhaustively in Kern’s initial study of 1964 on the relation between Husserl and Kant and the neo-Kantians. Indeed, this topic – in general, the relation between phenomenology and „critical“ philosophy – deserves a new look now that more materia…Read more
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15Lerner on Foundation, Person, and RationalityNew Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 10 167-170. 2010.
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55Karl Mertens: Zwischen letztbegründung und skepsis. Kritische untersuchungen zum selbstverständnis der transzendentalen phänomenologie Edmund husserls (review)Husserl Studies 14 (2): 161-174. 1997.
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22Laying bare the phenomenal field: The reductions as ways to pure consciousness: Section II, chapter 4, The phenomenological reductionsIn Andrea Sebastiano Staiti (ed.), Commentary on Husserl's "Ideas I", De Gruyter. pp. 133-158. 2015.
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68Introduction: Edmund Husserl: The Radical Reduction to the Living Present As the Fully Enacted Transcendental ReductionNew Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 5 352-357. 2005.When Edmund Husserl retired in 1928, ceding his chair at the University of Freiburg to his successor Martin Heidegger, he again began working intensively on synthesizing his philosophical efforts into a new “system of phenomenology.” This new presentation could, hopefully, displace his earlier presentation of 1913 in the Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy, Book I, a work with which he had become dissatisfied in the meantime
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23Introduction: Edmund Husserl: The Radical Reduction to the Living Present As the Fully Enacted Transcendental ReductionThe New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 5. 2005.When Edmund Husserl retired in 1928, ceding his chair at the University of Freiburg to his successor Martin Heidegger, he again began working intensively on synthesizing his philosophical efforts into a new “system of phenomenology.” This new presentation could, hopefully, displace his earlier presentation of 1913 in the Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy, Book I, a work with which he had become dissatisfied in the meantime.
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1"Idealismo realista": una respuesta husserliana heterodoxa a la pregunta del idealismo trascendentalEscritos de Filosofía 22 (43): 75-98. 2003.
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307Husserl’s Theory of the Phenomenological Reduction: Between Life-World and CartesianismResearch in Phenomenology 34 (1): 198-234. 2004.on points that remain especially crucial, i.e., the concept of the natural attitude, the ways into the reduction (and their systematics), and finally the question of the “meaning of the reduction.” Indeed, in the reading attempted here, this final question leads to two, not necessarily related, focal points: a Cartesian and a Life-world tendency. It is my claim that in following these two paths, Husserl was consistent in pursuing two evident leads in his philosophical enterprise; however, he was a…Read more
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50Husserl's Phenomenological Reduction Revisited: an Attempt of a Renewed AccountAnuario Filosófico 37 (78): 65-104. 2004.This essay attempts a renewed, critical exposition of Husserl’s theory of the phenomenological reduction, incorporating manuscript material that has been published since the defining essays of the first generation of Husserl research. The discussion focuses on points that remain especially crucial, i. e. the concept of the natural attitude, the ways into the reduction, and the question of the “meaning of the reduction”. The reading attempted here leads to two, not necessarily related, focal poin…Read more
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159Husserl's phenomenological discovery of the natural attitudeContinental Philosophy Review 31 (2): 153-170. 1998.In this paper I will give a systematic account of Husserl's notion of the natural attitude in the development from its first presentation in Ideas I (1913) until Husserl's last years. The problem of the natural attitude has to be dealt with on two levels. On the thematic level, it is constituted by the correlation of attitude and horizon, both stemming from Husserl's theory of intentionality. On the methodic level, the natural attitude is constituted by three factors: naturalness, naivety and no…Read more
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94Husserl's Notion of the Natural Attitude and the Shift to Transcendental PhenomenologyAnalecta Husserliana 80 114-119. 2002.