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Consequences of Phenomenology

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Echoing Richard Rorty's earlier Consequences of Pragmatism, this collection begins with an essay on "Phenomenology in America: 1964-1984," and concludes with a "Response to Rorty, or Is Phenomenolo...
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  • 15 January 1986
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Echoing Richard Rorty's earlier Consequences of Pragmatism, this collection begins with an essay on "Phenomenology in America: 1964-1984," and concludes with a "Response to Rorty, or Is Phenomenology Edifying?" In between, the differences in the philosophical habits and practice of Anglo-American and Euro-American philosophers are examined and a reformulated, non-foundational phenomenology is sketched as a new direction responsive to the current situation in American philosophy. Don Ihde considers perception, technics, and contemporary Continental thinkers such as Jacques Derrida, Hans Georg Gadamer, Michel Foucault, Ortega y Gassett, and Paul Ricoeur.

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Price: £25.50
Pages: 222
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Publication Date: 15 January 1986
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780887061424
Format: Paperback
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"A noteworthy contribution to the American response to the phenomenological movement. Professor Ihde is one of the leading scholars in American phenomenology today. His approach to the issues under discussion in this work is always fresh and sometimes highly original. What he has to say about perception, metaphor, metaphysics, technics, and technology will be of interest both to the specialist and the general reader." — Calvin O. Schrag

"Consequences of Phenomenology is exceedingly significant, not only for an adequate understanding of academic philosophy and the parochialism that has cramped the establishment for forty years, but because it helps us appreciate the ways in which phenomenology can undergird and further the interdisciplinary work which is now abroad in intellectual life." — Bruce Wilshire

Preface


Introduction: Phenomenology in America (1964-1984)


Part I. Perceptual Polymorphy
1. A Phenomenology of Voice
2. Is There Always Perception?
3. Phenomenology, "Metaphor-Metaphysics" and the Text


Part II. Technics
4. Technics: From Progress to Ambiguity
5. Technology: Utopia and Dystopia
6. Technology and Cultural Variations


Part III. Critical Essays
7. Ortega y Gassett and Phenomenology
8. Variation and Boundary: A Problem in Ricouer's Phenomenology
9. Epilogue: Response to Rorty, or, Is Phenomenology Edifying?


Notes


Index