Habit is a key concept in Husserl’s genetic phenomenology. In this paper, I want to flesh out Husserl’s conception of habit (for which he employs a wide variety of terms including: Habitus, Habitualität, Gewohnheit, das ...
Moran, Dermot(Philosophy Documentation Center, 2008-08)
Phenomenology, understood as a philosophy of immanence, has had an ambiguous, uneasy relationship with transcendence, with the wholly other, with the numinous. If phenomenology restricts its evidence to givenness and to ...
'Foreword to the New Edition', in Edmund Husserl, Ideas. A General
Introduction to Pure Phenomenology. Trans. W.R. Boyce Gibson. London &
New York: Routledge Classics, 2012, pp. xiii-xxxiii.
In Being and Nothingness (1943) Sartre includes a groundbreaking
chapter on 'the body' which treats of the body under three
headings: 'the body as being for-itself: facticity', 'the body-for-others',
and 'the third ...
In recent years there have been attempts to integrate first-person phenomenology into naturalistic science. Traditionally, however, Husserlian phenomenology has been resolutely anti-naturalist. Husserl identified naturalism ...
In his later works, Merleau-Ponty proposes the notion of 'the flesh' (la chair) as
a new 'element', as he put it, in his ontological monism designed to overcome the
legacy of Cartesian dualism with its bifurcation of all ...
This book draws on Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology, psychology, neuroscience and Buddhist philosophy to explicate Merleau-Ponty's unwritten ethics. Daly contends that though Merleau-Ponty never developed an ethics per se, ...