Zahavi offers a model of ‘I’, You and We consciousness that is grounded in the transcendentality of a minimal pre-reflective self-awareness , which he calls ‘for-meness’. Zahavi’s formulation of transcendental self-belonging as ‘for me-ness’ relies on the notion of a felt non-changing self- identity accompanying all intentional experiences. Zahavi’s treatment of the subject and object poles of experience as, respectively, self-inhering internality and externality, makes of self-awareness an alienating opposition between a purely self-identical felt for-meness and an external object, a fracture between self-identity and otherness.I argue that for Husserl the pure ego’s unchanging in-itself identity over time is merely an anonymous z...
This paper offers a further look at Husserl’s late thought on the transcendental subject and the Hus...
Husserl’s phenomenology offers a very complex treratment of the full conscious person as constituted...
The diversity and complexity of the arguments and criticisms among philosophers on the question of t...
Zahavi offers a model of ‘I’, You and We consciousness that is grounded in the transcendentality of ...
Taking up phenomenology’s problem of intentionality in the wake of Husserl, Jean-Paul Sartre in the ...
In this paper, I contend that there are at least two essential traits that commonly define being an ...
Seminar with Dan Zahavi Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory, Belgrade, June 201
Having begun from the assumption that our most fundamental way to relate to the world stems from an ...
Modern philosophy tends to conflate subjectivity and ego (I-think, cogito, and alike). One lesson we...
While it seems obvious that the embodied self is both a subject of experience and an object in the w...
In this paper, I explore Edmund Husserl's account of the life-world for evidence that he posits it a...
The common understanding of the self, at least in the West, is the modern conception, according to w...
Understanding phenomenology as a philosophical approach in which human-world relationships are analy...
The aim of this paper is to pin down the misuse of Heidegger’s philosophal insights within the disci...
A number of significant streams in contemporary philosophy tend to want to explain away autonomous s...
This paper offers a further look at Husserl’s late thought on the transcendental subject and the Hus...
Husserl’s phenomenology offers a very complex treratment of the full conscious person as constituted...
The diversity and complexity of the arguments and criticisms among philosophers on the question of t...
Zahavi offers a model of ‘I’, You and We consciousness that is grounded in the transcendentality of ...
Taking up phenomenology’s problem of intentionality in the wake of Husserl, Jean-Paul Sartre in the ...
In this paper, I contend that there are at least two essential traits that commonly define being an ...
Seminar with Dan Zahavi Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory, Belgrade, June 201
Having begun from the assumption that our most fundamental way to relate to the world stems from an ...
Modern philosophy tends to conflate subjectivity and ego (I-think, cogito, and alike). One lesson we...
While it seems obvious that the embodied self is both a subject of experience and an object in the w...
In this paper, I explore Edmund Husserl's account of the life-world for evidence that he posits it a...
The common understanding of the self, at least in the West, is the modern conception, according to w...
Understanding phenomenology as a philosophical approach in which human-world relationships are analy...
The aim of this paper is to pin down the misuse of Heidegger’s philosophal insights within the disci...
A number of significant streams in contemporary philosophy tend to want to explain away autonomous s...
This paper offers a further look at Husserl’s late thought on the transcendental subject and the Hus...
Husserl’s phenomenology offers a very complex treratment of the full conscious person as constituted...
The diversity and complexity of the arguments and criticisms among philosophers on the question of t...