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  1. How Sexist Is Sartre?Bonnie Burstow - 1992 - Philosophy and Literature 16 (1):32-48.
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  • Vision and Voice: Phenomenology and Theology in the Work of Jean-Luc Marion. [REVIEW]Merold Westphal - 2006 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1/3):117 - 137.
    The kind of phenomenology that can be useful to theology will be a hermeneutical phenomenology, one that takes us beyond the Cartesian/Husserlian ideal of presuppositionless intuition. It will also be a phenomenology of inverse intentionality, one in which the constituting subject is constituted by the look and the voice of another. In light of these suggestions, the phenomenology of Jean-Luc Marion is defended against three critiques, namely that it compromises the boundary between phenomenology and theology, that the theology it serves (...)
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  • Vision and Voice: Phenomenology and Theology in the Work of Jean-Luc Marion.Merold Westphal - 2007 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 60 (1):117-137.
    The kind of phenomenology that can be useful to theology will be a hermeneutical phenomenology, one that takes us beyond the Cartesian/Husserlian ideal of presuppositionless intuition. It will also be a phenomenology of inverse intentionality, one in which the constituting subject is constituted by the look and the voice of another. In light of these suggestions, the phenomenology of Jean-Luc Marion is defended against three critiques, namely that it compromises the boundary between phenomenology and theology, that the theology it serves (...)
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  • Saturation and disappointment.Ruud Welten - 2004 - Bijdragen 65 (1):79-96.
    The article focuses on Jean-Luc Marion’s ‘saturated phenomenon’ by reading it within the context of Husserl’s Logical Investigations. It is argued that Marion’s revision of Husserl must not be understood as a refutation of Husserl but rather as an extension of Husserlian phenomenology. In other words, since Marion needs Husserl and the thesis of intentionality to develop his ideas, the saturated phenomenon affirms the structure of classical phenomenology. This implies corrections of Marion’s description of the saturated phenomenon: the article investigates (...)
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  • Intentionality: A fundamental idea of Husserl's phenomenology.Jean-Paul Sartre - 1970 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 1 (2):4-5.
    “He devoured her with his eyes.” This expression and many other signs point to the illusion common to both realism and idealism: to know is to eat. After a hundred years of academicism, French philosophy remains at that point. We have all read Brunschvicg, Lalande, and Meyerson,2 we have all believed that the spidery mind trapped things in its web, covered them with a white spit and slowly swallowed them, reducing them to its own substance. What is a table, a (...)
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  • Sartre's Sexism Reconsidered.Constance Mui - 1990 - Auslegung 16 (1):31-41.
  • Liminality and the Problem of Being-in-the-world Reflections on Sartre and Merleau-Ponty.Mark Meyers - 2008 - Sartre Studies International 14:78-105.
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  • Liminality and the Problem of Being-in-the-world
    Reflections on Sartre and Merleau-Ponty.
    Mark Meyers - 2008 - Sartre Studies International 14 (1):78-105.
  • Lures, Slimes, Time: Viscosity and the Nearness of Distance.Brian McNely - 2019 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 52 (3):203-226.
    [Erratum] At evening, with the sun no longer overhead, the air developed a kind of viscosity in which time seemed to stand very still and the labyrinth of the city, no longer bisected by light and shade and unstirred by the afternoon breezes, appeared suspended in a kind of dream, paused in an atmosphere of extraordinary pallor and thickness.Contemporary rhetorical theory is in the midst of a new materialist turn. Things, sensations, affects, and ambience are seen as collectively forming the (...)
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  • Transcendentality and Nothingness in Sartre's Atheistic Ontology.King-Ho Leung - 2020 - Philosophy 95 (4):471-495.
    This article offers a reading of Sartre's phenomenological ontology in light of the pre-modern understanding of ‘transcendentals’ as universal properties and predicates of all determinate beings. Drawing on Sartre's transcendental account of nothingness in his early critique of Husserl as well as his discussion of ‘determination as negation’ in Being and Nothingness, this article argues that Sartre's universal predicate of ‘the not’ (le non) could be understood in a similar light to the medieval scholastic conception of transcendentals. But whereas the (...)
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  • Hart and Sartre on God and Consciousness.King-Ho Leung - 2021 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 82 (1):34-50.
    This article offers a comparative reading of the ontologies of David Bentley Hart and Jean-Paul Sartre as well as their respective appeals to phenomenology as a philosophical method. While it may seem odd to compare one of the twentieth century’s most celebrated atheists with one of contemporary Christianity’s most highly-acclaimed critics of atheism, this article shows that there are many surprising parallels between the ontological outlooks of Hart and Sartre, namely their conceptions of God as the unity of being and (...)
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  • Sartre and the Spirit of Revenge.Karsten Harries - 2004 - Sartre Studies International 10:25-38.
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  • Sartre and the spirit of revenge.Karsten Harries - 2004 - Sartre Studies International 10 (1):25-38.
  • Michel Henry's Non-Intentionality Thesis and Husserlian Phenomenology.Antonio Calcagno - 2008 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 39 (2):117-129.