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  1. Common-sense and scientific interpretation of human action.Alfred Schuetz - 1953 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 14 (1):1-38.
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  • A Conversation with Richard Rorty.C. G. Prado - 2003 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 7 (2):227-231.
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  • Liberating Experience from the Vice of Structuralism: The Methods of Merleau-Ponty and Nagarjuna.David Michael Levin - 1997 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 28 (2):116-141.
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  • A world of pure experience.William James - 1904 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 1 (21):533-543.
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  • Intending.A. C. Purton - 1980 - Philosophical Quarterly 30 (118):79-80.
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  • The power of reason.Hans-Georg Gadamer - 1970 - Man and World 3 (1):5-15.
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  • Freedom and Nature: The Voluntary and the Involuntary.Paul Ricoeur & Don Ihde - 1966 - Northwestern University Press.
    This volume, the first part of Paul Ricoeur's Philosophy of the Will, is an eidetics, carried out within carefully imposed phenomenological brackets. It seeks to deal with the essential structure of man's being in the world, and so it suspends the distorting dimensions of existence, the bondage of passion, and the vision of innocence, to which Ricoeur returns in his later writings. The result is a conception of man as an incarnate Cogito, which can make the polar unity of subject (...)
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  • A World of Pure Experience.William James - 1904 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 1 (20):533-543.
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  • Philosophy in the Conversation of Mankind.Richard J. Bernstein - 1980 - Review of Metaphysics 33 (4):745 - 775.
    RICHARD RORTY has written one of the most important and challenging books to be published by an American philosopher in the past few decades. Some will find it a deeply disturbing book while others will find it liberating and exhilarating—both, as we shall see, may be right and wrong. Not since James and Dewey have we had such a devastating critique of professional philosophy. But unlike James and Dewey, who thought that once the sterility and artificiality of professional—and indeed much (...)
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  • The Science of the Life-World.H. G. Gadamer - 1972 - Analecta Husserliana 2:173.
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  • Interpretation and the Sciences of Man.Charles Taylor - 1971 - Review of Metaphysics 25 (1):3 - 51.
    Interpretation, in the sense relevant to hermeneutics, is an attempt to make clear, to make sense of an object of study. This object must, therefore, be a text or a text-analogue, which in some way is confused, incomplete, cloudy, seemingly contradictory--in one way or another, unclear. The interpretation aims to bring to light an underlying coherence or sense.
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  • Liberating Experience from the Vice of Structuralisms: The Methods of Merleau-Ponty and Nargarjuna.David Michael Levin - 1997 - Philosophy Today 41 (1):96-111.
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  • Phenomenology.Edmund Husserl - unknown
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