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  1. Husserl on Ethical Renewal and Philosophical Rationality: Intercultural Reflection.Chung-Chi Yu - 2012 - Investigaciones Fenomenológicas 9:145.
    In the Kaizo articles, written between 1922 and 1924, Husserl drew on the intercultural relationship between Europe and non-Europe. The viewpoints he held in these articles do not deviate much from that in the Vienna lecture 1935, which is later included in Crisis. It is in the latter that Husserl delineates systematically what he thinks of the idea of Europe and what makes Europe different from the other parts of the world. Notably, these viewpoints were already disclosed in the Kaizo (...)
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  • (17 other versions)Husserl bibliography.Wojciech Żełaniec - 1992 - Husserl Studies 9 (3):175-177.
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  • A grasp from afar: Überschau and the givenness of life in Husserlian phenomenology.Andrea Staiti - 2013 - Continental Philosophy Review 46 (1):21-36.
    In this paper I explore the issue of how our personal life is given to us in experience as a whole to be actively shaped and determined. I examine in detail Husserl’s analysis of the kind of experience responsible for this achievement, which he terms Überschau and which thus far has never been addressed by scholars of phenomenology. First, I locate Überschau in the context of self-determination and highlight the difference between the unthematic pre-givenness of life in the phenomenon of (...)
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  • Values, Purposeful Ideas, and Human Culture in Husserl’s Kaizō Articles.D. J. Hobbs - 2022 - Husserl Studies 38 (3):335-358.
    In his 1922/1923 articles for the Japanese magazine _Kaizō_, Edmund Husserl identifies a particular “humanity” or human culture by the purposeful idea [_Zweckidee_] consciously embraced by the community. This purposeful idea is attained through rational self-formation on the part of the community in a manner analogous to the rational self-formation of the individual human being. Thereafter, it can be referenced to distinguish different cultures (or stages of cultural development) from one another through its objective manifestation in communal groups and cultural (...)
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