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: |
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... values can be accepted as ''measurable'', that is, as able to be expressed in quantitative, mathematical categories. Is it possible to measure them in any way so that the knowledge about values would be a specific counterpart to the ...
... values we make use of certain measures (we recognize some values as higher and others as lower; we see that values are realized to a greater or lesser extent, etc.). This allows us to assume that apart from physical metrum there exists ...
... values, or evaluations. Undoubtedly, the starting point here is so-called ''formal logic'', i.e., logic sensu stricto, the theory of forms of correct reasoning and the theory of the structure of deductive systems. G. Frege constructed a ...
... values have been made (cognitive, ethical, aesthetic, vital, personal, social, and ideological values are distinguished). Finally, axiology tries to establish a hierarchy of values (traditionally, the following three highest values are ...
... value (the beauty characteristic for it – e.g. the tragic, the comic, solemnity, poetry) in the cognitive attitude. Then, speaking of aesthetic value and of the work of art, we can directly use the experiences necessary in all contacts ...
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 |
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Logos of Phenomenology and Phenomenology of The Logos. Book Four: The Logos ... Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2005 |