Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Gander's Self-Understanding and Lifeworld is an eminent text within contemporary Continental philosophy. An English translation is essential and Ryan Drake and Joshua Rayman have done an admirable job preserving the style of the German." -Lawrence K. Schmidt, author of Understanding Hermeneutics

Table of Contents

Translators' Introduction
Foreword
Introduction
1. Exposition of the Connection Between Self-Being, Lifeworld, and History
2. Conception and Outline of the Treatise with an Excursis on the Paratextual Functions of Remarks
Part One. In the Network of Texts: Toward the Perspective Character of Understanding
3. Inception and Beginning: Toward a Fore-Structure of Understanding
4. Approaching the Question of Interpretation: On the Relation of "Author-Text-Reader"
5. On the Relation of Writing and Reading to Self-Formation
6. The Text as a Connection of Sense in the Horizon of the Occurrence of Tradition as Effective History
7. In the Governing Network of Discourse
8. The Sense-Creating Potential of Texts: The Modification of the World
9. Excursis on the Metaphor of the "Book of the World"
10. In the Network of Tradition: On Understanding as an Incursion into the Current of Texts
11. On the Interpretive Character of Knowledge in the Wake of the Historicity of Understanding
12. Parenthesis on the Discourse of Metaphysics "as such" as a Problem of an Epochal Revaluation in View of a Signature of the Present
13. Critical Remarks on the Concept of an Absolute Reason
Part Two. I and World: The Question Concerning the Ground of Philosophy
Chapter One. On the Search for the Certainty of the I
14. Toward the Task of a Hermeneutical Interpretation of the Concept and its Relation to Everyday Experience: An Approximation
15. Wonder and Doubt: On the Entry-Point of Philosophical Reflection
16. Under the Spell of Certainty: Descartes' Self-Certainty of the 'I am' as a Hermeneutical Problem
17. The Ontological Positioning of the Cartesian Ego Between Acquisition of the Self and Loss of the World
Chapter Two. On Life in Lifeworlds: Critical Considerations of Husserl's Phenomenology of the Lifeworld
18. The Concept of 'Lifeworld' as an Indication of the Problem
19. Husserl's Recourse to as an "Irruption into the Theoretical Attitude"
20. The Problem of Objectivism in the Tension Between and
21. Toward a Philosophical Thematization of Natural Life-in-the-World
22. On Husserl's Transcendental Self-Grounding of Philosophy with a View to the Question of the World
23. Husserl's Application of the Task of a Lifeworldly Ontology
24. The Function of History in Husserl's Transcendental-Phenomenological Conception
Part Three. Self-Understanding and the Historical World: Basic Traits of a Hermeneutical Ontology of Facticity
Chapter One. The Hermeneutical Turn: Heidegger's Critical Dialogue with Husserlian Phenomenology
25. Husserl versus Heidegger: On Situating their Disagreement
26. The Hermeneutical Stance on a Second View
27. The 'Blind Spot' in the Phenomenological Eye: Heidegger's Critique of Husserl with a View to the Structure of Care
a. Phenomenological Maxims of Research and Cognitive Intention
b. The 'Actual Things of Philosophy': The Being of the Human
28. The Metamorphosis of Phenomenology into the Hermeneutical
a. In Connection with the Tendencies of Lebensphilosophie
b. The Hermeneutical Approach in Pre-Theoretical Life
c. The New Hermeneutical Accentuation of Phenomenology
29. The Function and Relation of the Hermeneutical Ontology of Facticity, Fundamental Ontology, and Metontology
30. Aspects of a Contemporary Philosophical Situating of the Discourse on Facticity
Chapter Two. The Experiental Structure of the Self: Toward a Hermeneutics of Factical Historical Life
31. The Leap into the World: On Outlining the Factical-Hermeneutical Concept of Experience
32. Analysis of Environmental Experience
33. Remarks on the Problematic of the Foreign
34. The Self-World as the Center of Life-Relations
35. The Having-of-Oneself within the Field of Tension between Winning and Losing Oneself
36. The Structure of the Self as a Function of Life-Experience
37. On the Status of a Hermeneutics of Facticity as Ontological Hermeneutics
Chapter Three. Application-Destruktion-History: Hermeneutical Sketches of a Philosophy of the Situation
38. Hermeneutical Application
39. The Critical Sense: On the Task of Phenomenological Destruktion
40. History as the Organon of Understanding Life
Open End
41. Retrospective Reflections on the World-Conceptual Relevance of a Hermeneutics of Facticity
Bibliography

SelfUnderstanding and Lifeworld Basic Traits of

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A Hardback by Hans-Helmuth Gander, Ryan T. Drake, Joshua Rayman

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of SelfUnderstanding and Lifeworld Basic Traits of by Hans-Helmuth Gander

    Publisher: Indiana University Press
    Publication Date: 28/08/2017
    ISBN13: 9780253025555, 978-0253025555
    ISBN10: 0253025559

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    "Gander's Self-Understanding and Lifeworld is an eminent text within contemporary Continental philosophy. An English translation is essential and Ryan Drake and Joshua Rayman have done an admirable job preserving the style of the German." -Lawrence K. Schmidt, author of Understanding Hermeneutics

    Table of Contents

    Translators' Introduction
    Foreword
    Introduction
    1. Exposition of the Connection Between Self-Being, Lifeworld, and History
    2. Conception and Outline of the Treatise with an Excursis on the Paratextual Functions of Remarks
    Part One. In the Network of Texts: Toward the Perspective Character of Understanding
    3. Inception and Beginning: Toward a Fore-Structure of Understanding
    4. Approaching the Question of Interpretation: On the Relation of "Author-Text-Reader"
    5. On the Relation of Writing and Reading to Self-Formation
    6. The Text as a Connection of Sense in the Horizon of the Occurrence of Tradition as Effective History
    7. In the Governing Network of Discourse
    8. The Sense-Creating Potential of Texts: The Modification of the World
    9. Excursis on the Metaphor of the "Book of the World"
    10. In the Network of Tradition: On Understanding as an Incursion into the Current of Texts
    11. On the Interpretive Character of Knowledge in the Wake of the Historicity of Understanding
    12. Parenthesis on the Discourse of Metaphysics "as such" as a Problem of an Epochal Revaluation in View of a Signature of the Present
    13. Critical Remarks on the Concept of an Absolute Reason
    Part Two. I and World: The Question Concerning the Ground of Philosophy
    Chapter One. On the Search for the Certainty of the I
    14. Toward the Task of a Hermeneutical Interpretation of the Concept and its Relation to Everyday Experience: An Approximation
    15. Wonder and Doubt: On the Entry-Point of Philosophical Reflection
    16. Under the Spell of Certainty: Descartes' Self-Certainty of the 'I am' as a Hermeneutical Problem
    17. The Ontological Positioning of the Cartesian Ego Between Acquisition of the Self and Loss of the World
    Chapter Two. On Life in Lifeworlds: Critical Considerations of Husserl's Phenomenology of the Lifeworld
    18. The Concept of 'Lifeworld' as an Indication of the Problem
    19. Husserl's Recourse to as an "Irruption into the Theoretical Attitude"
    20. The Problem of Objectivism in the Tension Between and
    21. Toward a Philosophical Thematization of Natural Life-in-the-World
    22. On Husserl's Transcendental Self-Grounding of Philosophy with a View to the Question of the World
    23. Husserl's Application of the Task of a Lifeworldly Ontology
    24. The Function of History in Husserl's Transcendental-Phenomenological Conception
    Part Three. Self-Understanding and the Historical World: Basic Traits of a Hermeneutical Ontology of Facticity
    Chapter One. The Hermeneutical Turn: Heidegger's Critical Dialogue with Husserlian Phenomenology
    25. Husserl versus Heidegger: On Situating their Disagreement
    26. The Hermeneutical Stance on a Second View
    27. The 'Blind Spot' in the Phenomenological Eye: Heidegger's Critique of Husserl with a View to the Structure of Care
    a. Phenomenological Maxims of Research and Cognitive Intention
    b. The 'Actual Things of Philosophy': The Being of the Human
    28. The Metamorphosis of Phenomenology into the Hermeneutical
    a. In Connection with the Tendencies of Lebensphilosophie
    b. The Hermeneutical Approach in Pre-Theoretical Life
    c. The New Hermeneutical Accentuation of Phenomenology
    29. The Function and Relation of the Hermeneutical Ontology of Facticity, Fundamental Ontology, and Metontology
    30. Aspects of a Contemporary Philosophical Situating of the Discourse on Facticity
    Chapter Two. The Experiental Structure of the Self: Toward a Hermeneutics of Factical Historical Life
    31. The Leap into the World: On Outlining the Factical-Hermeneutical Concept of Experience
    32. Analysis of Environmental Experience
    33. Remarks on the Problematic of the Foreign
    34. The Self-World as the Center of Life-Relations
    35. The Having-of-Oneself within the Field of Tension between Winning and Losing Oneself
    36. The Structure of the Self as a Function of Life-Experience
    37. On the Status of a Hermeneutics of Facticity as Ontological Hermeneutics
    Chapter Three. Application-Destruktion-History: Hermeneutical Sketches of a Philosophy of the Situation
    38. Hermeneutical Application
    39. The Critical Sense: On the Task of Phenomenological Destruktion
    40. History as the Organon of Understanding Life
    Open End
    41. Retrospective Reflections on the World-Conceptual Relevance of a Hermeneutics of Facticity
    Bibliography

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