Works by Kenneth Knies ( view other items matching `Kenneth Knies`, view all matches )

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  1. Kenneth Knies (2012). Luft, Sebastian. Subjectivity and Lifeworld in Transcendental Phenomenology. The Review of Metaphysics 65 (4):881-883.
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  2. Kenneth Knies (2011). The Practical Obscurity of Philosophy: Husserl's “ Arbeit der Probleme der Letzten Voraussetzungen ”. Husserl Studies 27 (2):83-104.
    I argue that the teleological-historical reflections of the Crisis are an effort to clarify what Husserl calls the ultimate presuppositions of phenomenology. I begin by describing the kind of presuppositions revealed in natural-attitude and phenomenological reflection. I then consider how the ultimate presuppositions become problematic for Husserl. After clarifying the distinction between these presuppositions and those already handled by the reduction, I consider the appropriateness of the new reflections Husserl undertakes in order to address them.
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  3. Kenneth Knies (2010). Review of Nicolas de Warren, Husserl and the Promise of Time: Subjectivity in Transcendental Phenomenology. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (6).
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  4. Kenneth Knies (2006). Donohoe, Janet, Husserl on Ethics and Intersubjectivity: From Static to Genetic Phenomenology. Husserl Studies 22 (3).
  5. Kenneth Knies (2002). Thoughts on Bertell Ollman's How to Take an Exam and Remake the World. Radical Philosophy Review 5 (1/2):186-192.
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  6. Kenneth Knies (2001). Politics and Phenomenology: Beyond the Philosopher's Politics Toward a Political Eidetic. Radical Philosophy Review 4 (1/2):135-172.
    After identifying a crisis in our contemporary understanding of the relationship between philosophy and politics, the author carries out a clarification of three modalities of political expression: the slogan, commentary, and criticism, differentiating them all from the phenomenological expression through which they are disclosed. The essay argues that only through a principled stance against a relativism that would subordinate philosophical consciousness to political context does it become possible to explicate political meaning and enhance our understanding of political practice. The author (...)
     
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  7. Kenneth Knies (2001). Rethinking Two Categories of Political Economy. Clr James Journal 8 (2):35-72.
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  8. Kenneth Knies (2001). The Politics That No One Practices. Radical Philosophy Review 4 (1-2):135-172.
    After identifying a crisis in our contemporary understanding of the relationship between philosophy and politics, the author carries out a clarification of three modalities of political expression: the slogan, commentary, and criticism, differentiating them all from the phenomenological expression through which they are disclosed. The essay argues that only through a principled stance against a relativism that would subordinate philosophical consciousness to political context does it become possible to explicate political meaning and enhance our understanding of political practice. The author (...)
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