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Topic: Edmund Husserl


  
 Edmund Husserl
One may surmise, then, that Edmund Husserl came by his knowledge of the Bible through his classical secular education, not his religious tradition.
Among the last publication of Husserl's lifetime was the Cartesian Meditations of 1931, in which he addressed the apparent solipsism of his transcendental phenomenology.
Although there was a Jewish technical school in the town, Edmund's father, a clothing merchant, had the means and the inclination to send the boy away to Vienna at the age of 10 to begin his German classical education in the Realgymnasium of the capital.
http://www.steinschneider.com/biography/edmund_husserl.htm   (8580 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl: Philosophy and the Crisis of European Humanity
Nowhere, it seems, has Husserl developed this profound insight wherein he sees faith as a special kind of evidence, permitting theology, too, to be a science.
For Husserl, self-consciousness is a mark of 'personality' rather than 'spirituality'.
That man's Einstellung in regard to the world about him should, for Husserl, be the most of human existence seems to imply some affinity between this position and that which Heidegger expresses by In-der-Welt-sein.
http://www.users.cloud9.net/~bradmcc/husserl_philcris.html   (14061 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl
However, according to Husserl this does not mean that the objective world thus constituted in intersubjective experience is to be regarded as completely independent of the aspects under which we represent the world.
It is for this reason that Husserl can be said to adhere to a version of both “realism” and “idealism” at the same time.
Now the only function of the universal epoché is to establish the residuum thesis, which holds that the realm of (empirical) consciousness is “absolute” in that it does not depend on the existence of an external, spatio-temporal world (cf.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/husserl   (6302 words)

  
 Ralph Dumain: "The Autodidact Project": Marvin Farber: Edmund Husserl and the Aims of Phenomenology
Husserl has left a revealing tribute to Brentano, [1] to whom he always acknowledged indebtedness.
Husserl could say with right in his Ideas (Section 20): "When it is really natural science that speaks, we listen willingly and as disciples.
It is the opinion of some scholars who are acquainted with the manuscripts that they alone will truly portray the significance of Husserl.
http://www.autodidactproject.org/other/farber6.html   (4145 words)

  
 Existential Primer: Edmund Husserl
Husserl does not see that we cannot suspend a belief if the belief suspended is meaningless.
Phenomenological reduction, according to Husserl's teachings, is the exclusion from consideration of everything which is transcendent and anything else derived via scientific or logical inference.
If it were, according to Husserl, the world would lose meaning.
http://www.tameri.com/csw/exist/husserl.shtml   (1428 words)

  
 Glossary of People: Hu
Husserl's time of teaching in Göttingen, from 1901 to 1916, was important as the source of the Phenomenological movement.
Husserl also addressed the University in Prague in the fall of 1935, after which many discussions took place in the smaller circles.
In Vienna Husserl converted to the Evangelical Lutheran faith, and one year later, in 1887, he married Malvine Steinschneider, the daughter of a secondary-school teacher from Prossnitz, who was to be his indispensable support in life.
http://www.marxists.org/glossary/people/h/u.htm   (1711 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In an example Husserl explains this in the following way: if you are standing in front of a house, you have a proper, direct presentation of that house, but if you are looking for it and ask for directions, then these directions (e.g.
In 1939 Husserl's manuscripts, amounting to approximately 40,000 pages, were deposited at Leuven to form the Archives Husserl.
In 1886 Husserl went to the University of Halle to obtain his habilitation with Carl Stumpf, a former student of Brentano.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Husserl   (1274 words)

  
 Island of Freedom - Edmund Husserl
At that time he maintained that the truths of mathematics have validity regardless of the way people come to discover and believe in them.
Phenomenology had been criticized as an essentially solipsistic method, confining the philosopher to the contemplation of private meanings, so in Cartesian Meditations (1931; trans.
After 1916 Husserl taught at the University of Freiburg.
http://www.island-of-freedom.com/HUSSERL.HTM   (628 words)

  
 Husserl Page
The archive also houses two catalogues to Husserl's personal library, housed in Leuven.
Since the phenomenological tradition is a vital presence not only in North America and Europe, but in Latin America and Asia as well, the market for our books and journal--consisting of students, teachers, and researchers in phenomenological philosophy--is a global one."
The Archive is housed in the Raymond Fogelman Library of the New School.
http://www.husserlpage.com   (3285 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Logical Investigations, Volume 1 (International Library of Philosophy): Books: Edmund Husserl,Dermot ...
Husserl's expository prose there is lucid and compelling, even in fact (as he admits) in contradistinction to the rest of this rather massive book; the six studies which follow seem today to be by turns antediluvian and futuristic.
Cartesian Meditations : An Introduction to Phenomenology by Edmund Husserl
It is "generally understood" that Husserl's early work is irrelevant by contemporary standards, but on a considered view of intellectual history this is wrong: in fact, the philosophical doctrine known as "anti-psychologism" was nowhere as effectively expounded as in the *Prolegomena To Pure Logic*, the first "book" of the *Philosophical Investigations*.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0415241898?v=glance   (1022 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online encyclopedia you can trust!
Edmund Husserl --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online encyclopedia you can trust!
In 1916 Husserl accepted a professorship at the University of Freiburg, where Martin Heidegger was one of his students; when Husserl retired in 1928, Heidegger succeeded to his chair.
They were the first people to make it to the top of the world's highest mountain.
http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9367617?tocId=9367617   (948 words)

  
 Welcome to the Husserl Circle
Over Thirty Years of Husserl Conferences in North America
Subsequent to the Washington University conference in 1969, annual meetings of the Husserl Conference were hosted by many institutions all over the country.
If I do so, as is my complete freedom, then I do not negate this ‘world’ as if I were a sophist, I do not doubt its existence as if I were a skeptic.
http://www.husserlcircle.org   (189 words)

  
 Husserl's Inaugural Lecture at Freiburg im Breisgau
*Following the practice of Dorion Cairns in his translation of Husserl's Cartesian Meditations, the word 'object', spelled with a small letter, has been and will be used throughout to translate Gegenstand, spelled with a capital letter, it translates Objekt.
In the same way, words derived from Gegenstand or from Objekt will be translated with words derived from 'object', spelled with a small or with a capital letter, repectively.
He thought that he could prove, by his logically sharp but superficial criticism, this sort of mathematical analysis to be a completely groundless extravagance, a vacuous game played with empty abstractions.
http://www3.baylor.edu/~Scott_Moore/essays/Husserl.html   (4005 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl - Philosopher - Bibliography
Husserl's meditations remain trapped in a solipsistic reasoning in which the transcendental subject remains outside of time, as does God.
Husserl continued to work through his retirement from teaching at Freiburg in 1928 until his death from pleurisy in 1938.
Edmund Husserl was born in 1859, in the town of Prossnitz in Moravia.
http://www.egs.edu/resources/husserl.html   (697 words)

  
 BOOKSTORE: Edmund Husserl
Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) gave the 20th century one of its greatest philosophical doctrines -- phenomenology (the science of phenomena).
http://radicalacademy.com/bkshusserl.htm   (82 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl
What Husserl appears to be doing is taking the cogito of Descartes and universalizing it as a transcendent cogito, a consciousness that constitutes the entire universe through its perception--a Vishnu, whose dream is the universe, sleeping on his cosmic lotus.
Husserl distinguishes between the noetic--that which experiences, the experiencing--and the noematic--that which is experienced, being experienced.
Husserl asks how we can agree on what a particular object is. He appeals to a collective sense or category--in a kind of Platonic move--which he calls the transcendent, the realm of "essence" or eidoV.
http://www.brysons.net/academic/husserl.html   (615 words)

  
 COSMIC BASEBALL ASSOCIATION Edmund Husserl 1998 Cosmic Player Plate
Husserl was the founder of Phenomenology and one of the 20th centuries most influential philosophers.
Husserl himself was influenced by his teacher, Franz Brentano.
For Husserl, consciousness exists only in relation to the object it considers.
http://www.cosmicbaseball.com/husserl8.html   (107 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl
Husserl immersed himself in the study of logic from 1890-1900, and he soonafter produced another text: Logical Investigations(1901).
He began his studies as a mathemetician, but his studies were influencedby Brentano, who moved him to study more psychology and philosophy.
The founder of the movement in literary criticism known as Phenomenology.
http://home.earthlink.net/~potterama/Michele/projects/hyper/husserl.html   (264 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl
As a Jew teaching at Freiburg, Husserl was ejected from his position; to add insult to injury, the decree was co-signed by his former assistant, Martin Heidegger.
As influential as Husserl's thought has been, it is odd that he did not actually seriously begin his training in philosophy until after his PhD work, although in the past he had read David Hume with a great deal of enthusiasm and had attended Friedrich Paulsen's lectures on Kantian idealism.
The most important influence that Brentano had over Husserl was the concept of intentional consciousness.
http://www.nndb.com/people/247/000059070   (949 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Edmund Husserl (Philosophy, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Husserl concluded that consciousness has no life apart from the objects it considers.
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Philosophy, Biographies > Edmund Husserl
In his later work, Husserl moved toward idealism and denied that objects exist outside consciousness.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/H/Husserl.html   (273 words)

  
 Home Page
The Husserl Page: This Page links to many sources pertaining to the life and work of Edmund Husserl.
This page is a link to the Center for Advance Research in Phenomenology (CARA).
In their recourse to phenomenology, architects often search to find a resolution between the immediate intuition of the imaginative world and the materiality of architectural practice.
http://ehusserl.com   (352 words)

  
 A Comprehensive Chronology of The Life of Edmund Husserl
The letter is regarding Husserl's approval of Weyl's approach to the foundations of mathematics (analysis) in the latter's book:
1887: Husserl begins carreer at the University of Halle as Privatdozent.
1937, June 8th: Husserl disallowed to participate in 9th International Congess of Philosophy in Paris
http://hometown.aol.com/desertabd/mywork6.html   (351 words)

  
 Husserl.net
Chronology of Husserl’s life and works, as well as those of predecessors and successors.
Browse and discuss over four thousand texts concerning Husserl, including the 35 Husserliana volumes, other editions of Husserl's works, books about Husserl and Husserlian phenomenology, and scholarly essays.
Search for key terms in Husserl's work, such as “noema,” “horizon,” “zeit,” and “akt.” Sort results by year, book, etc. In this way you can track the development of Husserlian concepts over the course of his carreer.
http://www.husserl.net   (145 words)

  
 Academic Directory on Husserl, Edmund
This article by Parviz Mohassel at SUNY Stonybrook considers self-awareness and the relationship of consciousness to the body in relation to Husserl's writings.
This PDF file is a chapter from Husserl's Phenomenology: A Textbook (Mohanty and McKenna, eds.), which discusses intentionality, a central concept in Husserl's phenomenology.
It briefly describes the thought of Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre, Camus, and Kierkegaard.
http://www.alllearn.org/er/tree.jsp?c=40184   (390 words)

  
 The Husserl Archives
Scholars and advanced students in the field of phenomenology and phenomenological philosophy will be invited to present and discuss their work in a seminar format.
The activities of the center include the organization of small research groups, summer schools, and seminars composed of international students and scholars working on a variety of projects in or related to phenomenological philosophy.
Beginning in 2003, there will be a seminar connected to the Husserl Archives offered once a year by the Department of Philosophy.
http://www.newschool.edu/gf/phil/husserl   (328 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl at PhilosophyClassics.com -- essays, resources
If the name of the text is highlighted, follow the link for more information.
Own thousands of works of classic literature for less than 3c a book: our Classics Digital Library CD is the intelligent way to read and interact with the classics.
If you're knowledgeable about Husserl consider helping us build this site by becoming a Classics Expert.
http://www.philosophyclassics.com/philosophers/Husserl   (193 words)

  
 Edmund Husserl Links
Search OhioLINK Central Catalog for books about Edmund Husserl
Search OhioLINK Central Catalog for books by Edmund Husserl
Edmund Husserl [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] at http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/h/husserl.htm
http://elvers.stjoe.udayton.edu/history/people/Husserl.html   (59 words)

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