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A-T. Tymieniecka
I-X
Front matter
1-5
Part 1 / Theme
Theme
9-91
Part 2 / Section I
9-22
Husserl and Phenomenology, Experience and Essence
23-30
Jean Wahl the Precursor: Kierkegaard and Existentialism
31-43
The Transcendental and the Singular: Husserl and the Existential Thinkers Between the Two World Wars
45-73
DE L’ « In-Existence » Intentionnelle À Ĺ « Ek-In-Sistence » Existentielle
75-91
The Value of the Question in Husserl’s Perspective
95-200
Part 3 / Section II
95-110
The Essential Structure and Intentional Object of Action: Toward Understanding the Blondelian Existential Phenomenology
111-125
Subjectivity, Openness and Plurality: on the Background of Edmund Husserl’s Phenomenological Reduction
127-143
What Does it Mean to be an Existentialist Today?
145-160
Dufrenne and Merleau-Ponty: A Comparative Meditation on Phenomenology
161-177
The Ethical Project and Intentionality in Edmund Husserl
179-189
Is Nietzsche a Phenomenologist?—Towards a Nietzschean Phenomenology of the Body
191-200
The Problem of Authenticity and Everydayness in Existential Philosophy
203-273
Part 4 / Section III
203-215
Lev Shestov’s Philosophy of Crisis
217-229
The Idea of God-Man in Nicolas Berdyaev’s Existentialism
231-252
Unamuno as “Pathological” Phenomenologist: Tragic Sense and Beyond
253-273
Blondel and the Philosophy of Life
277-321
Part 5 / Section IV
277-293
From the Archeology of Happening … to the Matter of Death
295-307
The Phenomenology of Pain: An Experience of Life
309-321
The Existential Overcoming of Phenomenology in Hans Blumenberg’s Philosophy of Life and Myth
325-368
Part 6 / Section V
325-346
Temporality and Passivity in Edmund Husserl’s Analyses
347-357
On Existence, Actuality and Possibility
359-368
The Consciousness of Time in Life Through Phenomenology and Existentialism
371-419
Part 7 / Section VI
371-394
Existentialism: An Atheistic or A Christian Philosophy?
395-408
The Horizon of Humanity and the Transcendental Analysis of the Lifeworld
409-419
Crisis and Culture
423-450
Part 8 / Section VII
423-432
Understanding as Being: Heidegger and Mamardashvili
433-450
Mind – Its Way of Existence, Structure and Functions in Tibetan Buddhism – Comparison with Phenomenology
451-456
Back matter
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