Experience has been a pivotal philosophical topic since Greek antiquity. The phenomenological movement has also played a crucial role in the history of philosophical theories or ideas of experience. The major contributions of Husserlian and post-Husserlian phenomenology to the philosophical understanding of experience can hardly be overestimated. The ambition of this volume is to illustrate how phenomenology still remains a very fruitful approach that is essential to current philosophical and interdisciplinary debates on experience.
Antonio Cimino is Assistant Professor at the Center for the History of Philosophy and Science, Radboud University, Nijmegen (The Netherlands).
Cees Leijenhorst is Associate Professor at the Center for the History of Philosophy and Science, Radboud University, Nijmegen (The Netherlands).
Acknowledgements List of Contributors Introduction: Phenomenology and Experience: A Brief Historico-Philosophical Overview
âAntonio Cimino and Cees Leijenhorst What is Diaphenomenology? A Sketch
âEmmanuel Alloa Transcendental Experience
â>Bernardo Ainbinder Encountering Finitude: On the Hermeneutic Radicalization of Experience
âJussi Backman Poverty and Promise: Towards a Primordial Hermeneutic Experience
âGert-Jan van der Heiden Experience and Unity in Husserlâs Solution to the Crisis
âLorenzo Girardi Forgetfulness of Experience: Ideality and Necessity in Merleau-Pontyâs Reading of Husserlâs âOrigin of Geometryâ
âDiego DâAngelo Conditions of Historical Experience: Husserlian Reflections
âTimo Miettinen Motives in Experience: Pfänder, Geiger, and Stein
âGenki Uemura and Alessandro Salice Experience and Normativity: The Phenomenological Approach
âSophie Loidolt The Specificity of Medium: Painting and Thinking in Merleau-Pontyâs âEye and Mindâ
âNicolas de Warren Pregnant Embodiment as World Transformation
âTanja Staehler
All interested in phenomenology and twentieth-century philosophy.