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  1. The Visible and the Invisible: Followed by Working Notes.Maurice Merleau-Ponty - 1968 - Evanston [Ill.]: Northwestern University Press. Edited by Claude Lefort.
    This book contains the unfinished manuscript and working notes of the book Merleau-Ponty was writing when he died.
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  • Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy -- Second Book: Studies in the Phenomenology of Constitution.Edmund Husserl - 1990 - Springer.
    As is made plain in the critical apparatus and editorial matter appended to the original German publication of Hussed's Ideas II, I this is a text with a history. It underwent revision after revision, spanning almost 20 years in one of the most fertile periods of the philosopher's life. The book owes its form to the work of many hands, and its unity is one that has been imposed on it. Yet there is nothing here that cannot be traced back (...)
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  • (1 other version)Ideas Pertaining to A Pure Phenomenology and to A Phenomenological Philosophy. First Book.E. HUSSERL - 1982
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  • The Promise of Politics.Hannah Arendt - 2005 - Random House of Canada.
    Presents a collection of essays and previously unpublished writings that look at the philosophical aspects of political science, including Marxian philosophy.
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  • Plato and Europe.Jan Patočka - 2002 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    The Czech philosopher Jan Patocka (1907-1977), who studied with Husserl and Heidegger, is widely recognized as the most influential thinker to come from postwar Eastern Europe. Refusing to join the Communist party after World War II, he was banned from academia and publication for the rest of his life, except for a brief time following the liberalizations of the Prague spring of 1968. Joining Vaclav Havel and Jiri Hajek as a spokesman for the Chart 77 human-rights declaration of 1977, Patocka (...)
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  • Cartesian meditations.Edmund Husserl - 1960 - [The Hague]: M. Nijhoff.
    The "Cartesian Meditations" translation is based primarily on the printed text, edited by Professor S. Strasser and published in the first volume of Husserliana ...
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  • What Is Phenomenology?Jan Patočka - 2019 - In John J. Drummond & Otfried Höffe (eds.), Husserl: German Perspectives. New York, NY: Fordham University Press. pp. 84-109.
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  • The wound which will not close: Jan Patočka’s philosophy and the conditions of politicization.Daniel Leufer - 2017 - Studies in East European Thought 69 (1):29-44.
    This article investigates the political potentialities of Jan Patočka’s philosophy. It begins by situating Patočka’s philosophy in the context of the history of Czechoslovakia, and poses the question of whether Patočka’s late Kantianism and involvement with the Charter 77 initiative constitutes the sole political potentiality of his philosophy. It then argues that Patočka’s status as a political thinker is best understood by demarcating his pre-political philosophical core from its possible political applications. By sketching the essence of his philosophy as a (...)
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  • The Heretical Conception of the European Heritage in the Late Essays of Jan Patočka.Ivan Chvatík - 2004 - Phainomenon 8 (1):55-72.
    In this short piece I am not undertaking to give a full discussion of the whole of Patočka’s “heretical” work. I wish only make clear its most essential core. What, in Patočka’s view, made Europe Europe and what is Europe’s bequest to the world after what Patočka describes as its fall, completed by the two world wars? What should Europe look to conserve in itself if- as seems likely - it would like to once again play a respected role in (...)
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  • The human condition [selections].Hannah Arendt - 2013 - In Timothy C. Campbell & Adam Sitze (eds.), Biopolitics: A Reader. Durham: Duke University Press.
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  • Heretical Essays in the Philosophy of History.Jan Patočka - 1996 - Open Court Publishing.
    History begins inseparably with the birth of the polis and of philosophy. Both represent a unity in strife. History is life that no longer takes itself for granted. To speak, then, of the meaning of history is not to tell a story with a projected happy or unhappy ending, as Western civilization has hoped, at least since the French Revolution. History's meaning is the meaning of the struggle in which being both reveals and conceals itself. Technological society represents both the (...)
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  • Studien zur Phänomenologie, 1930-1939.Eugen Fink - 1966 - Den Haag: Nijoff.
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  • On the Eternal in Man.Max Scheler - 1961 - Philosophy 38 (145):284-285.
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  • The Risk of Freedom: Ethics, Phenomenology and Politics in Jan Patocka.Francesco Tava - 2015 - New York: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    The Risk of Freedom presents an in-depth analysis of the philosophy of Jan Patočka, one of the most influential Central European thinkers of the twentieth century, examining both the phenomenological and ethical-political aspects of his work. In particular, Francesco Tava takes an original approach to the problem of freedom, which represents a recurring theme in Patočka’s work, both in his early and later writings.Freedom is conceived of as a difficult and dangerous experience. In his deep analysis of this particular problem, (...)
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