Logos of Phenomenology and Phenomenology of The Logos. Book Four: The Logos of Scientific Interrogation, Participating in Nature-Life-Sharing in LifeAnna-Teresa Tymieniecka Springer Science & Business Media, 09.07.2006 - 356 Seiten Prompted and ever diversified by the specifically human interrogative logos, scientific inquiries seek a common system of links in order to mutually confirm and rectify their results. Coming closer and closer to phenomenology, the sciences of life find the common ground of the reality in the ontopoiesis of life. Could it not be that the interrogative logos of science, participating in human creative inventiveness will bring together also the divergent scientific methods in a common network? A network which comprises natural processes, societal sharing-in-life, and existential communication. Papers by: |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 58
... reality, carries along with it a practical interest. We may see how the discovery of rotation not only gave human beings an astounding insight into the stability and motion of material objects, a crucial insight into reality, allowing ...
... reality of Newtonian physics, dominated the view of reality in the 17th and 18th centuries. Yet this view could not stand the challenges of new insights and approaches of the scientific research which followed. Incontestably, we are now ...
... reality-inbecoming that is the gist of the philosophy/phenomenology of life.7 Is it not at this groundwork that scientific inquiries diversify in innumerable, singular proceeding sectors of reality, and, seeking a common connectedness ...
... reality are recognized as the object of science, which can be conceived as empirical facts and explicitly defined. The possibility of explaining all phenomena – including the anthroposphere – through their reduction to the structure and ...
... reality, we have reached the next problem that will now be considered: the styles of studying philosophy in light of the controversy between knowledge understood in an objectivist way and knowledge understood in a humanistic way. STYLES ...
Inhalt
3 | |
21 | |
ARIA OMRANI Objective Science in Husserlian LifeWorld | 38 |
NIKOLAY KOZHEVNIKOV Phenomenological Aspects of | 45 |
Spinoza | 57 |
ALEXANDER KUZMIN M Heideggers Project for | 66 |
SAMIAN Phenomena in Newtons Mathematical | 81 |
ARTHUR PIPER Sensible Models in Cognitive Neuroscience | 105 |
GARY BACKHAUS Toward a Cultural Phenomenology 169 | 168 |
The Landscapes of Human Life | 191 |
SMIRNOVA Schutzs Conception of Relevances | 203 |
ANJANA BHATTACHARJEE Demonstrating Mobility | 219 |
AMY LOUISE MILLER The Phenomenology of Self as Non | 227 |
SIMON DUPLOCK An ExistentialPhenomenological | 249 |
JARLATH FINTAN McKENNA The Meaningfulness of Mental | 269 |
OLGA LOUCHAKOVA Ontopoiesis and Union in the Prayer | 288 |
ROBERTO VEROLINI and FABIO PETRELLI Philosophical | 119 |
IGNACY S FIUT Phenomenology and Ecophilosophy | 137 |
LESZEK PYRA Men in Front of Animals | 151 |
EVA SYRˇISˇTˇOVA Das Lachen als die Kehrseite | 313 |
APPENDIX The Program of the Oxford Third World | 325 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Logos of Phenomenology and Phenomenology of The Logos. Book Four: The Logos ... Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2005 |