Results for 'Phenomenological Freedom'

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  1.  6
    A Phenomenological Study on Schiller’s Conception of Freedom - On the Relation between Otherness and Autonomy -. 박인철 - 2018 - Cheolhak-Korean Journal of Philosophy 136:53-82.
    20세기 이후 많이 논의되는 주제가 타자이다. 전통적으로, 특히 근대이후, 자유주의의 대두와 함께 타자와 자유는 서로 양립하기가 어려운 개념으로 여겨져 왔다. 자유주의의 관점에서 자유는 외적 억압 및 방해의 부재라는 조건이 필수적이며, 이 외적 억압 및 방해의 핵심을 이루는 것이 바로 타자(타인)이다. 벌린의 ‘소극적 자유’ 개념은 이를 잘 보여주는 대표적인 사례이다. 그러나 현대에 이르러 자유는 타자를 배제하고 이해하기 어려우며, 타자성 또한 자유의 본질적 계기로 받아들여야 한다는 주장이 강력하게 제기되었다. 관계적 체험을 중요하게 생각하는 현상학은 바로 이러한 관점에서 자유에 대한 논의를 펼친다. 아렌트나 메를로퐁티 (...)
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  2.  56
    The Risk of Freedom: Ethics, Phenomenology and Politics in Jan Patocka.Francesco Tava - 2015 - New York: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    The Risk of Freedom presents an in-depth analysis of the philosophy of Jan Patočka, one of the most influential Central European thinkers of the twentieth century, examining both the phenomenological and ethical-political aspects of his work. In particular, Francesco Tava takes an original approach to the problem of freedom, which represents a recurring theme in Patočka’s work, both in his early and later writings.Freedom is conceived of as a difficult and dangerous experience. In his deep analysis (...)
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  3.  25
    Freedom in Sartre’s Phenomenology: The Kantian Limits of a Radical Project.Sorin Baiasu - 2021 - In Cynthia D. Coe (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook of German Idealism and Phenomenology. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 107-128.
    An easily recognizable feature of Sartre’s phenomenological existentialism is his conception of freedom. According to a popular interpretation, we are absolutely free, not only from factual constraints, but also free to create and pursue our own values. In this respect, Sartre appears to continue in a radical direction the Kantian project of making room for freedom in a world colonized by scientific determinism and dogmatic moralism. This chapter challenges the popular reading. It argues that Sartre extends the (...)
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  4. Freedom and the Phenomenology of Agency.Martine Nida-Rümelin - 2018 - Erkenntnis 83 (1):61-87.
    Free action and microphysical determination are incompatible but this is so only in virtue of a genuine conflict between microphysical determination with any active behavior. I introduce active behavior as the veridicality condition of agentive experiences and of perceptual experiences and argue that these veridicality conditions are fulfilled in many everyday cases of human and non-human behavior and that they imply the incompatibility of active behavior with microphysical determination. The main purpose of the paper is to show that the view (...)
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  5. The Phenomenology of Agency and Freedom: Lessons from Introspection and Lessons from Its Limits.Terry Horgan - 2011 - Humana Mente 4 (15).
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  6. The Phenomenology of Agency and Freedom: Lessons from Introspection and Lessons from Its Limits.Terry Horgan - 2011 - Humana. Mente 15:77-97.
     
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  7. The Phenomenology of Freedom.Tomis Kapitan - 2007 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 28 (3/4):189.
    John Searle describes our sense of freedom as an experience of a “gap” between an intentional action and its psychological antecedents, specifically, our reasons.. Since the gap is itself understood as a lack of causation, then no agent can accept the antecedent determination of voluntary action except at the price of “practical inconsistency.” I argue that despite Searle’s insightful discussion, the sense of freedom is not an experience of a gap as he describes it but, instead, is a (...)
     
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  8. Value, freedom, responsibility: central themes in phenomenological ethics.Sophie Loidolt - 2018 - In Dan Zahavi (ed.), Oxford Handbook of the History of Phenomenology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
     
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  9.  39
    From Phenomenological Self-Givenness to the Notion of Spiritual Freedom.Iris Hennigfeld - 2020 - PhaenEx 13 (2):38-51.
    In my paper, I want to focus not only on the notions of givenness and evidence in Husserl’s phenomenology, but also on phenomenological work “after” Husserl. I will elaborate on how these phenomenological key ideas can methodologically be made fruitful, especially for an investigation into religious phenomena. After giving an outline of Husserl’s notions of givenness, evidence, and original intuition, I want to portray key elements of Steinbock’s discovery of a generative dimension in Husserl’s phenomenology and show how (...)
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  10.  7
    Freedom and Education: A Phenomenological Study on the Theory of Education in Rousseau and Schiller. 박인철 - 2020 - Journal of the Society of Philosophical Studies 130:1-30.
    루소와 쉴러는 자유의 문제를 교육과 연관해 논의를 펼치고 있다는 점에서 공통점을 보인다. 이때 어떻게 개개 인간을 자유를 매개로 하나의 자율적 인격체로 성장시키는가가 양자의 교육론의 초점이 된다. 루소는 자연적 자유라는 이상적 자유의 상황을 설정, 이것이 사회적 자유로 확장될 수 있는 가능성을 교육학적으로 고찰한다. 이때 루소는 자연적 감정인 동정심과 양심을 근거로 자연적 자유가 사회 속에서도 가능함을 입증하고자 하며, 이를 위해 루소는 자연적 감성에 바탕을 둔 건전한 상상력의 배양을 교육의 주된 수단으로 이해한다. 그러나 루소는 이러한 상상력의 가능조건에 대해 방법론적으로 제대로 성찰하지 않음으로써 한계를 (...)
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  11.  32
    The Experience of Freedom at the Limits of Reflection in Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology.Peter Warnek - 2013 - Chiasmi International 15:411-429.
    The paper revisits the discussion of freedom in the Phenomenology of Perception and considers how according to Merleau-Ponty a phenomenology of freedom must challenge the tradition that attempts to account for experience and appearance through the filter of reflective consciousness. The paper begins by posing this problem in broad historical terms, as a distinctly modern predicament, and briefly considers Schelling’s philosophical engagement with negative philosophy as a provocation and historical precedent for reading the phenomenological work of Merleau-Ponty. (...)
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  12.  68
    Freedom and Independence. A Study of the Political Ideas of Hegel’s “Phenomenology of Mind”.Joshua Cohen & Judith N. Shklar - 1980 - Philosophical Review 89 (2):288.
  13.  63
    Freedom and independence: a study of the political ideas of Hegel's Phenomenology of mind.Judith N. Shklar - 1976 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Originally published in 1976, this book was written specifically to guide students of political theory who want to understand Hegel's political ideas as they ...
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  14. Freedom through despair: Kierkegaard's phenomenological analysis.Daniel Dahlstrom - 2010 - In Jeffrey Hanson (ed.), Kierkegaard as Phenomenologist: An Experiment. Northwestern University Press.
     
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  15. Phenomenology and freedom.David Detmer - 2010 - In Adrian Mirvish & Adrian Van den Hoven (eds.), New perspectives on Sartre. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 114.
  16.  17
    Phenomenology, Consciousness and Freedom.C. M. T. Hanly - 1966 - Dialogue 5 (3):323-345.
  17. Phenomenologies of freedom.Mary Aloysius Schaldenbrand - 1960 - Washington,: Catholic University of America Press.
  18. Freedom, Self-Reflection and Inter-subjectivity or Psychoanalysis and the Limits of the Phenomenological Method.Wilfried Ver Eecke - 1974 - Analecta Husserliana 3:252.
  19. Hannah Arendt: Existential phenomenology and political freedom.Wayne F. Allen - 1982 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 9 (2):170-190.
    This paper has three purposes: first, to explicate the ex istential basis of Arendt's theory of action. This will be done by first tracing the intellectual derivation of Arendt's existentialism and the modifications she made to fit it in to her public realm. Second, I will demonstrate the con nection between Arendt's existentialism and her formula tion of political freedom. Third, I will illustrate throughout that Arendt's political ideas, if they are to be properly understood, must be subsumed under (...)
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  20. Outlines for a Phenomenology of Freedom.Guilia Roberta Cervo - 2018 - Phänomenologische Forschungen 2018 (1):90-117.
    The article deals with the question of phenomenological ethics, comparing Husserl’s and Fink’s ways of understanding the phenomenological reduction and thereby the pedagogical tasks of phenomenology, whose existential meaning lies in the “doctrine of freedom” (“Lehre von der Freiheit”), which is in turn closely linked with the problem of the beginning of philosophizing, since the phenomenological reduction presupposes itself. A comparison between Fink’s and Patocka’s views of freedom as transcendence (expressed by the concepts of hermitry (...)
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  21.  6
    Decolonizing Existentialism and Phenomenology: The Liberation of Philosophies of Freedom and Identity.Jina Fast - 2023 - Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This trans-disciplinary, socio-spatial study analyzes the history of decolonial existentialist and phenomenological theory in the work of figures such as Simone de Beauvoir, Richard Wright, Franz Fanon, Lewis Gordon, Audre Lorde, Sylvia Wynter, and Jamaica Kincaid to decolonize dominant discourses on femininity, Blackness, and Black peoples.
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  22.  19
    Freedom and Independence. A Study of the Political Ideas of Hegel’s “Phenomenology of Mind”. [REVIEW]Peter P. Nicholson - 1977 - The Owl of Minerva 8 (4):6-7.
    In spite of the recent surge of publication on Hegel’s social and political thought, the political ideas of the Phenomenology have remained relatively neglected. A volume devoted to them is thus welcome, especially from Professor Shklar, whose earlier books were exceptionally clear, able, and stimulating.
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  23. Freedom.Jonathan Webber - 2011 - In Sebastian Luft & Søren Overgaard (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Phenomenology. E-Publications@Marquette.
    Human freedom was Jean-Paul Sartre’s central philosophical preoccupation throughout his career. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that the cornerstone of his moral and political thought, Being and Nothingness, contains an extensive and subtle account of the metaphysical freedom that he considered fundamental to the kind of existence that humans have. Although rooted in phenomenology, Sartre’s account of freedom draws very little on analysis of the experience of freedom itself. It is rather based on a general (...) account of perceptual experience and the motivation of action. The result is one of the most sophisticated portrayals of freedom in Western philosophical literature. It is certainly the most detailed account of freedom given by any of those philosophers who made the description of experience their central philosophical method. This claim is more usually made for Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s account of freedom, which he presents in critical dialogue with Sartre’s, but as we will see his account stops short of a full phenomenology of agency and owes its plausibility and popularity in part to its author having asked one question too few. (shrink)
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  24.  12
    Freedom and Independence: A Study of the Political Ideas of Hegel's Phenomenology of Mind. [REVIEW]Z. A. Pelczynski - 1977 - Political Theory 5 (1):127-130.
  25.  68
    Freedom and selfhood.James R. Mensch - 1997 - Husserl Studies 14 (1):41-59.
    Freedom is a perennial topic of philosophy. It is also one of themost puzzling. Regarding it, we are tempted to say with Augustine, “I know well enough what it is, provided that nobody asks me.” 1 We can all sense its presence.We use the word constantly, yet an account of it seems to elude us.My purpose in this paper is to see if phenomenology can provide such an account, one that includes in its description the features philosophers ascribe to (...)
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  26. Freedom and Belief.Galen Strawson - 1986 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    On the whole, we continue to believe firmly both that we have free will and that we are morally responsible for what we do. Here, the author argues that there is a fundamental sense in which there is no such thing as free will or true moral responsibility (as ordinarily understood). Devoting the main body of his book to an attempt to explain why we continue to believe as we do, Strawson examines various aspects of the "cognitive phenomenology" of (...)--the nature, causes, and consequences of our deep commitment to belief in freedom. (shrink)
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  27.  14
    The phenomenology of freedom in the German philosophical tradition: Kantian origins. [REVIEW]Robert Herzstein - 1967 - Journal of Value Inquiry 1 (1):47-63.
  28.  48
    Mental Illness and the Conciousness of Freedom: The Phenomenology of Psychiatric Labelling.Bruce Bradfield - 2002 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 2 (1):1-14.
    Paradigmatically led by existential phenomenological premises, as formulated by Jean-Paul Sartre and Edmund Husserl specifically, this paper aims at a deconstruction of the value of psychiatric labelling in terms of the implications of such labelling for the labelled individual’s experience of freedom as a conscious imperative. This work has as its intention the destabilisation of labelling as a stubborn and inexorable mechanism for social propriety and regularity, which in its unyielding classificatory brandings is Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology , (...)
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  29.  22
    The risk of freedom: ethics, phenomenology and politics in Jan Patočka.Lorenzo Girardi - 2017 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 48 (1):81-83.
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  30. Self and Freedom: The Vedantic and Phenomenological Perspectives.Gustav Roth - 1992 - In Gustav Roth & H. S. Prasad (eds.), Philosophy, grammar, and indology: essays in honour of Professor Gustav Roth. Delhi, India: Sri Satguru Publications. pp. 20--79.
  31.  4
    The Risk of Freedom: Ethics, Phenomenology and Politics in Jan Patocka.Jane Ledlie (ed.) - 2015 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    An examination of the moral and political aspects of the philosophical work of Jan Patočka, one of the most influential Central European philosophers of the twentieth century.
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  32.  10
    Sydney Empiricism and freedom in the Phenomenology of Spirit.Scott McBride - 2014 - Hegel-Jahrbuch 2014 (1).
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  33.  20
    The risk of freedom: Ethics, phenomenology, and politics in Jan Patočka.Jérôme Melançon - 2016 - Contemporary Political Theory 15 (4):489-492.
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  34.  82
    Phenomenology of Embodied Intersubjectivity: From Zhuangzi to Hermann Schmitz.Christian Helmut Wenzel - 2017 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 2017 (2):291-303.
    Hermann Schmitz has developed a “New Phenomenology.” It emphasizes fundamental conceptions that undercut traditional subject-object distinctions. In the Chinese classic The Zhuangzi we find stories that describe involvements and dialogue that can be seen as doing something similar. I will bring out some of these parallels. In particular I will focus on freedom and mutual understanding.
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  35. Freedom, Resistance, Agency.Manuel Dries - 2015 - In Manuel Dries & P. J. E. Kail (eds.), Nietzsche on Mind and Nature. New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 142–162.
    While Nietzsche's rejection of metaphysical free will and moral desert has been widely recognised, the sense in which Nietzsche continues to use the term freedom affirmatively remains largely unnoticed. The aim of this article is to show that freedom and agency are among Nietzsche’s central concerns, that his much-discussed interest in power in fact originates in a first-person account of freedom, and that his understanding of the phenomenology of freedom informs his theory of agency. He develops (...)
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  36.  27
    Freedom and Culture.Shuchen Xiang - 2018 - Idealistic Studies 48 (2):175-194.
    Through a key passage (Xici 2.2) from the Book of Changes, this paper shows that Ernst Cassirer’s philosophy of symbolic forms shares similarities with the canonical account of symbolic formation in the Chinese tradition: the genesis of xiang (象), often translated as image or symbol. xiang became identified with the origins of culture/civilisation itself. In both cases, the world is understood as primordially (phenomenologically) meaningful; the expressiveness of the world requires a human subject to consummate it in a symbol, whilst (...)
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  37.  6
    On Burying the Dead: Funerary Rites and the Dialectic of Freedom and Nature in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit.David Ciavatta - 2007 - International Philosophical Quarterly 47 (3):279-296.
    Hegel’s specific interpretation of burial rituals in the Phenomenology is an important part of his general understanding of the development of human freedom and of spirit. For Hegel, freedom is not something immediately given, but something that must be realized by way of the self’s ongoing practical engagement with the world, and in particular by way of the self’s transformation of the otherwise meaningless realm of nature into a vehicle for realizing a specifically human meaning. The practice of (...)
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  38.  98
    On Burying the Dead: Funerary Rites and the Dialectic of Freedom and Nature in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit.David Ciavatta - 2007 - International Philosophical Quarterly 47 (3):279-296.
    Hegel’s specific interpretation of burial rituals in the Phenomenology is an important part of his general understanding of the development of human freedom and of spirit. For Hegel, freedom is not something immediately given, but something that must be realized by way of the self’s ongoing practical engagement with the world, and in particular by way of the self’s transformation of the otherwise meaningless realm of nature into a vehicle for realizing a specifically human meaning. The practice of (...)
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  39. Freedom From Responsibility: Agent-Neutral Consequentialism and the Bodhisattva Ideal.Christian Coseru - 2016 - In Rick Repetti (ed.), Buddhist Perspectives on Free Will: Agentless Agency? London, UK: Routledge / Francis & Taylor. pp. 92-105.
    This paper argues that influential Mahāyāna ethicists, such as Śāntideva, who allow for moral rules to be proscribed under the expediency of a compassionate aim, seriously compromise the very notion of moral responsibility. The central thesis is that moral responsibility is intelligible only in relation to conceptions of freedom and human dignity that reflect a participation in, and sharing of, interpersonal relationships. The central thesis of the paper is that revisionary strategies, which seek to explain agency in event-causal terms, (...)
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  40. Spontaneous Freedom.Jonathan Gingerich - 2022 - Ethics 133 (1):38-71.
    Spontaneous freedom, the freedom of unplanned and unscripted activity enjoyed by “free spirits,” is central to everyday talk about “freedom.” Yet the freedom of spontaneity is absent from contemporary moral philosophers’ theories of freedom. This article begins to remedy the philosophical neglect of spontaneous freedom. I offer an account of the nature of spontaneous freedom and make a case for its value. I go on to show how an understanding of spontaneous freedom (...)
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  41.  18
    Freedom and Belief: Revised Edition.Galen Strawson - 1986 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    This is a revised and updated edition of Galen Strawson's groundbreaking first book, where he argues that there is a fundamental sense in which there is no such thing as free will or true moral responsibility. This conclusion is very hard to accept. On the whole we continue to believe firmly both that we have free will and that we are truly morally responsible for what we do. Strawson devotes much of the book to an attempt to explain why this (...)
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  42. Phenomenological method and contemporary ethics.John J. Drummond - 2021 - Continental Philosophy Review 54 (2):123-138.
    Following a brief summation of the phenomenological method, the paper considers three metaethical positions adopted by phenomenologists and the implications of those positions for a normative ethics. The metaethical positions combine epistemological and ontological viewpoints. They are non-intellectualism and strong value realism as represented by the axiological views of phenomenologists such as Scheler, Meinong, Reinach, Stein, Hartmann, von Hildebrand, and Steinbock; non-intellectualism and anti-realism as represented by the freedom-centered phenomenologies of Sartre, Beauvoir, and Merleau-Ponty; and weak intellectualism and (...)
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  43.  34
    Phenomenology and Teleology: Hans Jonas's Philosophy of Life.Lewis Coyne - 2017 - Environmental Values 26 (3):297-315.
    Although Hans Jonas's theory of responsibility has been influential on continental European environmental ethics, his philosophy of life, which seeks to rehabilitate a teleological account of living beings and describe their differing degrees of 'existential freedom', is less well-known. In this article, I reconstruct the stages of Jonas's phenomenological account and address the key criticisms levelled at it. I argue that although Jonas's theory is flawed by internal contradictions, these may be rectifiable, and, if so, his philosophy of (...)
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  44.  35
    Foucault on Freedom.Johanna Oksala - 2005 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Freedom and the subject were guiding themes for Michel Foucault throughout his philosophical career. In this clear and comprehensive analysis of his thought, Johanna Oksala identifies the different interpretations of freedom in his philosophy and examines three major divisions of it: the archaeological, the genealogical, and the ethical. She shows convincingly that in order to appreciate Foucault's project fully we must understand his complex relationship to phenomenology, and she discusses Foucault's treatment of the body in relation to recent (...)
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  45.  81
    Its Own Reward: A Phenomenological Study of Artistic Creativity.David Rawlings & Barnaby Nelson - 2007 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 38 (2):217-255.
    The phenomenology of the creative process has been a neglected area of creativity research. The current study investigated the phenomenology of artistic creativity through semi-structured interviews with 11 artists. The findings consisted of 19 interlinked constituents, with 3 dynamics operating within these constituents: an intuition-analysis dynamic, a union-division dynamic, and a freedom-constraint dynamic. The findings are discussed in relation to the issues of creativity and spirituality, intuition and analysis, the creative synthesis, affective components, and flow. The findings display considerable (...)
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  46. Enacting Phenomenological Gestalts in Ultra-Trail Running: An Inductive Analysis of Trail Runners’ Courses of Experience.Nadège Rochat, Vincent Gesbert, Ludovic Seifert & Denis Hauw - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:409060.
    Using an enactive approach to trail runners’ activity, this study sought to identify and characterize runners’ phenomenological gestalts, which are forms of experience that synthesize the heterogeneous sensorimotor, cognitive and emotional information that emerges in race situations. By an in-depth examination of their meaningful experiences, we were able to highlight the different typologies of interactions between bodily processes (e.g., sensations, pains), behaviors (e.g., actions, strategies) and environment (e.g., meteorological conditions, route profile). Ten non-professional runners who ran an ultra-trail running (...)
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  47.  24
    “I Guess that the Greatest Freedom … ”: A Phenomenology of Spaces and Severe Multiple Disabilities.Kristin Vindhol Evensen & Øyvind Førland Standal - 2017 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 17 (2):1-11.
    This paper expresses wonder about how bodies in motion can lead towards an understanding of lived meaning in silent lifeworlds. In such lifeworlds, expressions are without words, pre-symbolic, and thus embodied. To address the wonder, phenomenological philosophy and phenomenological methodology were employed to frame an approach that acknowledges lives with disabilities as qualitatively different from, and yet not inferior to, nor less imbued with meaning than, lives without.The paper focuses on spatiality as decisive in determining possibilities for persons (...)
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  48.  54
    Freedom and the choice to choose oneself in Being and Time.B. Han-Pile - 2013 - In .
    What Heidegger means by “freedom” in Being and Time is somewhat mysterious: while the notion crops up repeatedly in the book, there is no dedicated section or study, and the concept is repeatedly connected to a new and opaque idea – that of the “choice to choose oneself.” Yet the specificity of Being and Time’s approach to freedom becomes apparent when the book is compared to other texts of the same period, in particular The Metaphysical Foundations of Logic, (...)
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  49.  10
    Judith N. Shklar, "Freedom and Independence: A Study of the Political Ideas of Hegel's ""Phenomenology of Mind"". [REVIEW]Frederick A. Olafson - 1980 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 18 (3):361.
  50.  12
    Pragmatic Perspectives in Phenomenology.Ondřej Švec & Jakub Čapek (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    _Pragmatic Perspectives in Phenomenology_ offers a complex analysis of the pragmatic theses that are present in the works of leading phenomenological authors, including not only Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty, as it is often the case within Hubert Dreyfus’ tradition, but also Husserl, Levinas, Scheler, and Patocka. Starting from a critical reassessment of existing pragmatic readings which draw especially on Heidegger’s account of Being-in-the-world, the volume’s chapters explore the following themes as possible justifications for speaking about the pragmatic turn in phenomenology: (...)
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