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James and Husserl: the foundations of meaning

The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff (1974)

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  1. Husserl’s appropriation of the psychological concepts of apperception and attention.Daniel J. Dwyer - 2007 - Husserl Studies 23 (2):83-118.
    In the sixth Logical Investigation, Husserl thematizes the surplus (Überschuß) of the perceptual intention whereby the intending goes beyond the partial givenness of a perceptual object to the object as a whole. This surplus is an apperceptive surplus that transcends the purely perceptual substance (Gehalt) or sensed content (empfundene Inhalt) available to a perceiver at any one time. This surplus can be described on the one hand as a synthetic link to future, possible, active experience; to intend an object is (...)
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  • The Jamesian Appeal of Scheler's Felt Metaphysics.J. Edward Hackett - 2015 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 7 (1):29-43.
    I attempt to solve a problematic feature of Scheler's intentional feeling. Spiritual feelings are disembodied and elements of William James's pragmatism offer a way to make elements of Scheler's phenomenology more concrete than Scheler's phenomenology allows. I then further develop this insight since contact between both Scheler and James opens up possible trajectories and affinities that, in the end, reveal both thinkers share an affective underpinning to their respective metaphysics. In both thinkers, reality is given as felt. As such, this (...)
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  • Book reviews. [REVIEW]David C. Geary, Bert H. Hodges, Robert Schwartz, Debra Sue Pate & Tracy B. Henley - 1996 - Philosophical Psychology 9 (2):281-295.
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  • Postmodern philosophy?G. B. Madison - 1988 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 2 (2-3):166-182.
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  • Reviving Christian humanism: Science and religion.Don S. Browning - 2011 - Zygon 46 (3):673-685.
    Abstract. A possible consequence of the dialogue between science and religion is a revived religious humanism—a firmer grasp of the historical and phenomenological meanings of the great world religions correlated with the more accurate explanations of the rhythms of nature that natural science can provide. The first great expressions of religious humanism in the West emerged when Jewish, Christian, and Islamic scholars sat in the same libraries in Spain and Sicily, studying and translating the lost manuscripts of Aristotle in the (...)
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