The increasing rationalisation of European modernity and the attendant disenchantment of the world have been a key topic in phenomenology. They have been connected to a loss of meaning due to the disappearance of a common worldview on the basis of which people understood themselves such as those provided by myth, religion, or metaphysics. Even though this process itself is not unique to Europe, it does provide the narrative structure of many typical accounts of Europe. In these accounts Europe has lost its connection to what is taken to be its spiritual core (usually identified with either Greek rationality or Christianity). The solution often offered to this crisis is a re-establishment of this spirit to renew the meaning of the world. Thi...
Although the notion of the crisis of European sciences has a general meaning, Husserl mainly focuses...
Europe as a philosophical object The crisis of european culture at the end of nineteenth century i...
The author disagrees with Georg Funke on the primacy of common sense in Husserls\u27 phenomenology, ...
During the past century a discourse of crisis has accompanied the discourse on Europe. While there h...
Abstract English During the past century a discourse of crisis has accompanied the discourse on Eur...
Introduction to the Special Issue of the Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, 'Phenomen...
Europe is beset by crises. This refrain resounds today from all corners and under many guises: econo...
This paper undertakes to reconstruct the idea of Europe in the writings of Jan Patočka and Paul Ricœ...
<p>The aim of this paper is to discuss whether and to what extent Husserl’s <em>Crisis </em>can help...
The meaning of Europe exceeds its territorial limits, and is not fully ascribable either to the even...
The idea of Europe has already a long history and beyond its ethical attractiveness it became victor...
According to Husserl, the loss or the discovery of meaning for the whole humanity, was linked to the...
Introduction to the issue of Metodo: International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy, 'Facing ...
Shedding new light on the theme of crisis in Husserl\u27s phenomenology, this book reflects on the...
This thesis is an explication and analysis of Edmund Husserl\u27s phenomenology as he presents it is...
Although the notion of the crisis of European sciences has a general meaning, Husserl mainly focuses...
Europe as a philosophical object The crisis of european culture at the end of nineteenth century i...
The author disagrees with Georg Funke on the primacy of common sense in Husserls\u27 phenomenology, ...
During the past century a discourse of crisis has accompanied the discourse on Europe. While there h...
Abstract English During the past century a discourse of crisis has accompanied the discourse on Eur...
Introduction to the Special Issue of the Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, 'Phenomen...
Europe is beset by crises. This refrain resounds today from all corners and under many guises: econo...
This paper undertakes to reconstruct the idea of Europe in the writings of Jan Patočka and Paul Ricœ...
<p>The aim of this paper is to discuss whether and to what extent Husserl’s <em>Crisis </em>can help...
The meaning of Europe exceeds its territorial limits, and is not fully ascribable either to the even...
The idea of Europe has already a long history and beyond its ethical attractiveness it became victor...
According to Husserl, the loss or the discovery of meaning for the whole humanity, was linked to the...
Introduction to the issue of Metodo: International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy, 'Facing ...
Shedding new light on the theme of crisis in Husserl\u27s phenomenology, this book reflects on the...
This thesis is an explication and analysis of Edmund Husserl\u27s phenomenology as he presents it is...
Although the notion of the crisis of European sciences has a general meaning, Husserl mainly focuses...
Europe as a philosophical object The crisis of european culture at the end of nineteenth century i...
The author disagrees with Georg Funke on the primacy of common sense in Husserls\u27 phenomenology, ...