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         Phenomenology Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. Postmodernism and Continental Philosophy (Selected Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy) by Hugh J. Silverman, 1988-06
  2. Modern Movements in European Philosophy: Phenomenology, Critical Theory, Structuralism
  3. Nietzsche's Existential Imperative (Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy) by Bernd Magnus, 1978-08
  4. Phenomenology and Psychological Science: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives (History and Philosophy of Psychology)
  5. Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Hegel and The Phenomenology of Spirit (Routledge Philosophy Guidebooks) by Robert Stern, 2001-12-14
  6. Introduction to Phenomenology by Robert Sokolowski, 1999-10-28
  7. Husserl: an analysis of his phenomenology (Northwestern University studies in phenomenology & existential philosophy) by Paul Riceur, 1967
  8. The Problem of Difference: Phenomenology and Poststructuralism (Toronto Studies in Philosophy) by Jeffrey A. Bell, 1998-05-16
  9. Husserl and phenomenology (Hutchinson University library. Philosophy) by Edo Pivcevic, 1970
  10. Sensibility and Singularity: The Problem of Phenomenology in Levinas (Suny Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy) by John E. Drabinski, 2001-04
  11. Descriptions (Selected Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, No 11) by Don Ihde, 1985-10
  12. Role Playing and Identity: The Limits of Theatre As Metaphor (Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy) by Bruce Wilshire, 1991-03
  13. Phenomenology and existentialism, (Sources in contemporary philosophy) by Robert C Solomon, 1972
  14. Hermeneutics and Deconstruction (Selected Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, No 10) by Hugh J. Silverman, 1985-11

41. Home|KLUWER Academic Publishers
The purpose of this Book Series is to foster the development of phenomenological philosophy through creative research. Contemporary issues in philosophy, other disciplines and in culture generally, offer opportunities for the application of phenomenological methods that call for creative responses
http://kapis.www.wkap.nl/series.htm/CTPH
Outdated Link You have reached our site using an outdated link. Your browser will automatically redirect you to the most relevant section in the site after 5 seconds. If the automatic redirect is not working: click here Apologies for any inconvenience.

42. Interesting Thing Of The Day: Phenomenology
Besides being an independent branch of philosophy, phenomenology is applied withincreasing regularity to other fields, including science, literature, and the
http://itotd.com/index.alt?ArticleID=100

43. Phenomenology
underlies it. It was this version of phenomenology that most significantlyinfluenced the philosophy of Heidegger. History of philosophy.
http://www.philosophypages.com/hy/6i.htm
Philosophy
Pages
F A Q Dictionary ... Locke
Phenomenology: Bracketing Experience
Late in the nineteenth century, a group of Austrian philosophers grew dissatisfied with the excessive subjectivity fostered by the philosophy of the later German idealists . Borrowing their methods from the emerging sciences of psychology and sociology, these phenomenologists sought to restore a proper balance by securing the objectivity of experiential content at all costs.
Brentano
The basic approach of phenomenology was first developed by Franz Brentano , who was influenced both by scholastic versions of Aristotelian thought and by the radical empiricism of Hume . The central concern of philosophy, Brentano supposed, is to understand the nature and content of awareness in ways that illuminate the distinction between the mental and the non-mental. In Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt ( Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint (1874) Brentano proposed that every mental act be understood to have a doubly significant representational function, designating both itself reflectively and a phenomenal object intentionally . Indeed, this distinction between acts and their objects precisely delineates the crucial distinction for Brentano, since

44. Welcome To ASSC5 (OVERVIEW)
Perception, Attention, and phenomenology. questions have been actively discussedin recent years by neuroscientists, psychologists, philosophers, and other
http://www.duke.edu/philosophy/assc5.html
Welcome to ASSC5, the fifth conference of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness Use the navigation bar to access different parts of the site. UPDATED JULY 19th 2001 OVERVIEW REGISTRATION TRAVEL INFO SOCIAL ... Axel Cleermans ' website of the ASSC4 conference THE CONTENTS OF CONSCIOUSNESS Perception, Attention, and Phenomenology THANK YOU FOR HELPING MAKE ASSC5 A SUCCESS FOR THE PROGRAM GO TO PROGRAM SECTION OR USE THE 'SAVE TARGET AS' ON YOUR BROWSER TO DOWNLOAD AN RTF VERSION (printable) THE PROGRAM Consciousness has rich and diverse contents, from sensory experiences such as vision, audition, and bodily sensations such as pain, to nonsensory aspects such as volition, emotion, memory, and thought. All of these conscious states can be seen as part of the contents of consciousness. Furthermore, most conscious states can be seen as having representational contents of their own, in the sense that they are about something: objects and states of affairs in the world, or states of our own body. The contents of these states are all presented to us, in William James's powerful metaphor, as part of a "stream of consciousness". The contents of consciousness raise many important questions: Just how rich is the content present in conscious experience? Do the contents of attention exhaust the contents of consciousness, or is there consciousness outside attention? What is the neural basis of the representation of conscious content? How does consciousness of our own body differ from consciousness of the external world? What methods are available to monitor the contents of consciousness in an experimental context? What is the relationship between consciousness and representation? All of these questions have been actively discussed in recent years by neuroscientists, psychologists, philosophers, and other researchers.

45. Dictionary Of Philosophy Of Mind - Phenomenology
au einer reinen Phänomenologie und phänomenologischen Philosophie (Ideas Pertainingto a Pure phenomenology and to Phenomenological philosophy, First Book
http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~philos/MindDict/phenomenology.html
phenomenology (1) subjective or phenomenal experience (2) a systematic study of consciousness from a first-person perspective originated by Husserl. See phenomenological critique of representationalism The term 'phenomenology' is often used in a general sense to refer to subjective experiences of various types. In a more specialized sense it refers to a disciplined study of consciousness from a 1st-person perspective. As a discipline it is often associated with the German philosopher Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) and numerous European philosophers influenced by him, including Martin Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. In the philosophy of mind there exists continuing debate about the validity and usefulness of this approach to the study of consciousness. S. Gallagher
References
Classic sources
E. Husserl. 1913. (Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to Phenomenological Philosophy, First Book, trans. F. Kersten. The Hague: Nijhoff,1982). E. Husserl. 1927. " Phenomenology " in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 14th ed. Vol 17: 699-702.

46. Philosophy - Graduate Faculty - New School University
The Husserl Archives at the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science isa research center for phenomenology and phenomenological philosophy under the
http://www.newschool.edu/gf/phil/husserl-archive.htm
Established in 1966 in memory of Alfred Schutz, The Husserl Archives at the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science is a research center for phenomenology and phenomenological philosophy under the direction of the Department of Philosophy. The center is in possession of a complete collection of transcriptions of Edmund Husserl's unpublished writings, currently located in the Raymond Fogelman Library. The purpose of the Husserl Archives is to promote and facilitate research in the work of Husserl in particular and phenomenological philosophy generally. The activities of the center will include the organization of small research groups, summer schools, and seminars composed of international students and scholars working on a variety of projects in or related to phenomenological philosophy. James Dodd, Director
Department of Philosophy, Graduate Faculty, New School University

47. Phenomenology Of Perception
phenomenology of Perception (Routledge Classics) Customer Review 3 CounterpieceOriginally, I read this book as part of a philosophy of the Body course, in
http://www.phil-books.com/Phenomenology_of_Perception_Routledge_Classics_0415278
Phenomenology of Perception
Phenomenology of Perception

by Authors: Maurice Merleau-Ponty , Colin Smith
Released: 03 May, 2002
ISBN: 0415278414
Paperback
Sales Rank:
List price:
Our price: You save: Book > Phenomenology of Perception > Customer Reviews: Average Customer Rating:
Phenomenology of Perception > Customer Review #1: The future of Philosophy is right here, under my eyes...

Jorge Humberto Dias, Professor of Philosophy in Portugal, Oliveira de Frades.
Phenomenology of Perception > Customer Review #2: The best phil. of mind book that no Anglophone ever reads. Well, not narrowly on the philosophy of mind; thatd be an analytic-biased description (and one that leaves out all the things such people may extraneous and annoying in this book). The field of philosophy of mind in Anglophone philosophy has all but ignored Merleau-Pontys work, much to its disadvantage. Connectionism and dynamic systems theory as applied to the mental are seen as a "new" development, but the Gestalt psychologists and Merleau-Ponty had very much the same ideas long before. And a bunch of other ones, which to Anglophone ears may sound like theyre from that other planet which lies across the Channel, but which deserve to be taken seriously. Warning: this book is HARD to read, all the more so because of cultural differences between analytic and continental philosophers. The translation is also not very good; if you can read French, go for the original. It helps to read other work ABOUT Merleau-Ponty; M.C. Dillons "Merleau-Pontys Ontology" is the best book Ive found in this regard.

48. Pathways To Phenomenology And Analytic Philosophy
Pathways to phenomenology and Analytic philosophy. The phenomenologicalphilosophy of Maurice MerleauPonty (1908-1961) 337; XII.
http://www.formalontology.it/pathways_philosophy_two.htm
Home Site Map
Pathways to Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy
Go to: Pathways to Philosophy - General Works
Go to: Pathways to Metaphysics
Go to: Pathways to Ontology
Go to: Pathways to Philosophical Logic and the Philosophy of Logic
Preliminary note : The purpose of these pages is to give both the beginner and the more experienced reader a brief guide to the introductory literature on general philosophy, metaphysics, ontology, phenomenology, analytical philosophy, philosophical logic and the philosophy of logic.. In its initial form the pages will contain a selection of introductory readings, with brief annotations on the content (for the most important books, also the index); subsequently them will be expanded to include more specific essays on selected problems. In the sections for beginners, preference will be given to those books more readily available, in other sections some books could be out of print; if your Library does not possess the volume, it may be able to obtain it via interlibrary loan. Every effort will be made to give details that facilitate bibliographical research.

49. Society, Philosophy, Continental Philosophy: Phenomenology
phenomenology is a school of philosophy whose principal purpose is to study thephenomena, or appearances, of humanexperience while attempting to suspend all
http://www.combose.com/Society/Philosophy/Continental_Philosophy/Phenomenology/
Top Society Philosophy Continental Philosophy ... Analecta Husserlana - Book Series on Phenomenology published under the auspices of The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning Bulgarian Phenomenological Centre - Based at the Institute for Philosophical Research at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. Includes information about international activities, research projects, publications, and seminars. Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology - Extending and deepening phenomenology and kindred continental thought in philosophy, the social sciences, and the humanities. Center for Phenomenology and Hermeneutics of Values - A Center for Advanced Studies in Phenomenology and Hermeneutics at the Institute for Axiological Research, Vienna. Includes different projects, publications and resources. Centre for Philosophy and Phenomenological Studies - Has the aim to promote through electronic media philosophical inquiries and exchanges of philosophical findings as well as pedagogical pursuits by interaction with both undergraduate and graduate students in the field of phenomenological research in the widest possible sense Contributions to Phenomenology - The purpose of this Book Series is to foster the development of phenomenological philosophy through creative research. Contemporary issues in philosophy, other disciplines and in culture generally, offer opportunities for the application of phenomenological methods that call for creative responses

50. Kelly.html
1. Introduction. phenomenology is a movement in French and German philosophy thatflourished during the first half of the 20 th century (roughly 19001950).
http://humanities.ucsc.edu/NEH/kelly.html
Husserl and Phenomenology Sean D. Kelly Last modified: To appear in: Robert C. Solomon and David Sherman (eds.), Blackwell Guide to Continental Philosophy , (London: Blackwell, 2002). Introduction Phenomenology is a movement in French and German philosophy that flourished during the first half of the 20 th century (roughly 1900-1950). It continues to be practiced in modified form today both in the United States and elsewhere. Phenomenology provides a foothold into philosophical problems of various sorts – from problems in philosophical logic, ontology, and metaphysics to problems about the nature of mind and the content of perception. But to a first approximation at least, phenomenology takes its start in the fundamental problem of describing accurately and completely the essential features of our everyday lived experience. Phenomenology stands at the foundation of a wide range of 20 th century philosophy as it was practiced on the European Continent. European philosophers as diverse as Derrida, Habermas, Foucault, Gadamer, Levinas, de Beauvoir, Marcel and Sartre all worked, at some point in their career, either within or in relation to the phenomenological tradition. But perhaps the three most important and influential phenomenologists, the philosophers who did most to define and develop the method and substance of phenomenology, were Edmund Husserl (1859-1938), Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), and Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908-1961).

51. CULTURAL HERITAGE AND CONTEMPORARY CHANGE
PSYCHOLOGY, phenomenology and CHINESE philosophy. Chapter 3. Philosophical Notionsof the Person. George F. McLean. PART II. phenomenology and Psychology.
http://www.crvp.org/book/Series03/III-6/contents.htm
CULTURAL HERITAGE AND CONTEMPORARY CHANGE SERIES III. ASIA, VOLUME 6
PSYCHOLOGY, PHENOMENOLOGY and CHINESE PHILOSOPHY CHINESE PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES, VI
edited by VINCENT SHEN RICHARD KNOWLES TRAN VAN DOAN
CONTENTS
PREFACE
FOREWORD INTRODUCTION
PART I. The Person and the Human Sciences
Chapter 1. Sciences, Psychology and Realism
Fritz Wallner, Kurt Durnwalder Chapter 2. The Primacy of Action and Its Scientific Consequences for the Hermeneutics of the Human Sciences G.B. Madison Chapter 3. Philosophical Notions of the Person George F. McLean
PART II. Phenomenology and Psychology
Chapter 4. Plurality in Social Psychology
Rolf Von Eckartsberg Chapter 5. Phenomenology and Psychology Before and After the Phenomenological Reduction Cheng-Yun Tsai Chapter 6. Lao-Tze and Husserl: a Comparative Study of Peter Kun-Yu Woo
PART III. Phenomenology and Human Consciousness
Chapter 7. Human Being and "Abgrund"
Chan Wing-Chuek Chapter 8. Confucian Hsin and Its Twofold Functions: Psychological Aspects of Confucian Moral Philosophy, with an Excursus on Heidegger's Later Thought Thaddeus T'ui-Chieh Hang Chapter 9. Structure, Meaning and Critique

52. This Is The Phenomenology Page.
The French existentialist Jean Paul Sartre attempted to adapt Heidegger s phenomenologyto the philosophy of consciousness, thereby in effect returning to
http://www.connect.net/ron/phenom.html
Phenomenology
Phenomenology, 20th-century philosophical movement dedicated to describing the structures of experience as they present themselves to consciousness, without recourse to theory, deduction, or assumptions from other disciplines such as the natural sciences. Husserl What Husserl discovered when he contemplated the content of his mind were such acts as remembering, desiring, and perceiving and the abstract content of these acts, which Husserl called meanings. These meanings, he claimed, enabled an act to be directed toward an object under a certain aspect; and such directedness, called intentionality, he held to be the essence of consciousness. Transcendental phenomenology, according to Husserl, was the study of the basic components of the meanings that make intentionality possible. Later, in Cartesian Meditations (1931; trans. 1960), he introduced genetic phenomenology, which he defined as the study of how these meanings are built up in the course of experience. Heidegger All phenomenologists follow Husserl in attempting to use pure description. Thus, they all subscribe to Husserl's slogan “To the things themselves.” They differ among themselves, however, as to whether the phenomenological reduction can be performed, and as to what is manifest to the philosopher giving a pure description of experience. The German philosopher Martin Heidegger, Husserl's colleague and most brilliant critic, claimed that phenomenology should make manifest what is hidden in ordinary, everyday experience. He thus attempted in Being and Time (1927; trans. 1962) to describe what he called the structure of everydayness, or being-in-the-world, which he found to be an interconnected system of equipment, social roles, and purposes.

53. Existentialism, The Realm Of Existentialism, Philosophy, Psychology, Katharena E
phenomenology is a school of philosophy whose principal purpose is to study the phenomena,or appearances, of human experience while attempting to suspend all
http://www.dividingline.com/private/Philosophy/Philosophers/Existentialism/Pheno

Realm of Existentialism
Basics of Existentialism Minds of Existentialism Existentialism Books and Reviews ... Philosophy Now
Phenomenology Defined
Phenomenology is a school of philosophy whose principal purpose is to study the phenomena, or appearances, of human experience while attempting to suspend all consideration of their objective reality or subjective association. The phenomena studied are those experienced in various acts of consciousness, mainly cognitive or perceptual acts, but also in such acts as valuation and aesthetic appreciation. Phenomenology took its present shape at the beginning of the 20th century with the writings of Edmund Husserl. Husserl intended to develop a philosophical method that was devoid of all presuppositions and that would describe phenomena by focusing exclusively on them, to the exclusion of all questions of their causal origins and their status outside the act of consciousness itself. His aim was to discover the essential structures and relationships of the phenomena as well as the acts of consciousness in which the phenomena appeared, and to do this by as faithful an exploration as possible, uncluttered by scientific or cultural presuppositions. There is considerable diversity in the use that Husserl's successors have made of his method. Max Scheler, an early assistant of Husserl, adapted it to religious and ethical experience, and

54. Husserl Page: Research Organizations
Translate this page Society for phenomenology and Existential philosophy (USA) http//www.spep.org/SPEP is the Society for phenomenology and Existential philosophy, a
http://www.husserlpage.com/hus_orgs.html
The Husserl Page
Organizations Devoted to Phenomenological Research
Web Sites Only
For the most comprehensive list of organizations devoted to phenomomenological research,
consult the Organization of Phenomenological Organizations

  • http://www.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/phenomenology/

    "Die Arbeitsgruppe ist aus dem Arbeitsbereich von Bernhard Waldenfels im DFG-Graduiertenkolleg

  • http://www.fenomenologia.ubi.pt/
    Association for Phenomenology and Cognitive Science
    http://www2.canisius.edu/~gallaghr/pcs.html
    British Society for Phenomenology
    http://www.siue.edu/BSP/

  • The Society champions the cause of Phenomenology, in particular, and Continental European Philosophy, in general, in a preservative and creatively open way, both in the pages of the Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology and at its annual general meeting, which is held at St. Edmund Hall, Oxford, United Kingdom, during the Easter period. It fosters the original thought of phenomenological philosophers on their own terms, in relation to philosophical traditions, and through dialogue and debate with contemporary philosophical issues and theories. The Society faces the new millenium in a confident and forward-looking way to promote clarity of understanding and respect for differences through the raising of searching questions and the pursuit of critical debates.
  • Bulgarian Phenomenological Center
    http://www.phenomenology.eu.org/

55. Husserl Page: Dorion Cairns' Bibliography
philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 1940. Concerning Beck s The Last Phaseof Husserl s phenomenology. , philosophy and Phenomenological Research.
http://www.husserlpage.com/hus_r3cs.html
Dorion Cairns
The Husserl Page
A Bibliography of Writings
Books and Articles:
  • "The Philosophy of Edmund Husserl." Ph.D. diss., Harvard University.
  • "Some Results of Husserl's Investigations," The Journal of Philosophy , XXXVI (April 27), pp. 236-238. [Reprinted in The Philosophy of Edmund Husserl and its Interpretation.
  • "An Approach to Phenomenology." in Philosophical Essays in Memory of Edmund Husserl. Edited by Marvin Farber. New York, NY: Greenwood Press, 1968, pp. 3-18. ( Revised and Updated in 1973
  • "The Ideality of Verbal Expressions." in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. Volume I, 1940, pp. 452-462. ( Revised and Updated in 1973
  • 1991. Embree, Lester. "Two Husserlians Discuss Nazism: Letters between Dorion Cairns and Aron Gurwitsch in 1941." In Husserl Studies. Vol. 8, no. 2, 77-105.
  • "Phenomenology" and other entries. in The Dictionary of Philosophy. Edited by Dagobert D. Runes. New York, NY: The Philosophical Library, pp. 231-234.
  • "Phenomenology." in A History of Philosophical Systems. Edited by Vergilius Ferm. New York, NY: The Philosophical Library, pp. 353-364.

56. Romanian Society For Phenomenology | International Phenomenology Journals
THE NEW YEARBOOK FOR phenomenology AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL philosophy. 3/2003. 2/2002.1/2001. THE NEW YEARBOOK FOR phenomenology AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL philosophy (3).
http://www.culture.ro/srf/journals.php?jid=12

57. Romanian Society For Phenomenology | International Phenomenology Journals
C. Hopkins Jacob Klein and the phenomenology of History, part I. Marcus BrainardAs Fate Would Have It Husserl on the Vocation of philosophy. Algis Mickunas Self
http://www.culture.ro/srf/journals.php?vid=6

58. Phenomenology And Cognitive Science
The work of MerleauPonty, who employed the results of psychological and neurologicalresearch in his phenomenological philosophy, represents a good model for
http://www.philosophy.ucf.edu/pcsnf.html
A website dedicated to providing resources focusing on the intersection of phenomenology and cognitive science.
  • Home
  • Projects
  • Colloquia
  • Research Papers
  • Resources Phenomenology
    Cognitive Science

    Neurophenomenology

    Bibliography
    ... Frames This website is dedicated to providing resources focusing on the intersection of phenomenology and the cognitive sciences. Statement of purpose: The set of resources provided or referenced here includes
  • theoretical explorations of possible relations between phenomenology and cognitive science
  • practical and applied research that employs phenomenological resources in cognitive science
  • materials to support teaching and research in this area
  • updates on publications, conferences, and other related projects
  • 59. Phenomenology And Cognitive Science
    Evan Thompson (philosophy, York University, Toronto) organized an international and todiscuss how various methodologies in phenomenology and cognitive science
    http://www.philosophy.ucf.edu/pcsintro.html
    No Frames: Index Frames This website is dedicated to providing resources focusing on the intersection of phenomenology and the cognitive sciences. Statement of purpose: The set of resources provided or referenced here includes
  • theoretical explorations of possible relations between phenomenology and cognitive science
  • practical and applied research that employs phenomenological resources in cognitive science
  • materials to support teaching and research in this area
  • updates on publications, conferences, and other related projects Background: The motivation for creating this site came from a meeting that took place in September 1999 at the Fetzer Institute ( Human Consciousness: Integrating Phenomenology and Cognitive Science. ). Evan Thompson (Philosophy, York University, Toronto) organized an international and interdisciplinary group of researchers to discuss how various methodologies in phenomenology and cognitive science can address the philosophical issue of intersubjectivity and knowledge of other minds. Subsequent to this meeting several other colloquia and workshops have been organized with the support of various institutions, including the Centre de recherches en epistémologie appliquée (CREA), the Phénoménologie et Cognition Research Group centered in Paris, and the Association for Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences (see Projects and Colloquia for an updated list).
  • 60. Dean Komel - Department Of Philosophy, Ljubljana
    His research interests are hermeneutics, phenomenology, philosophy of culture, philosophyof art, philosophical translation and terminology, European cultural
    http://www.ff.uni-lj.si/filo/english/staff/komela.htm
    Dean Komel
    Associate Professor
    e-mail: dean.komel@guest.arnes.si
    Biography
    Dean Komel (1960) received his PhD in 1995, after studied phenomenology and hermeneutics at the University of Bochum under Bernhard Waldenfels and Klaus Held. He teaches Philosophical und Cultural Hermeneutics at the Department of Philosophy; Head of the Department of Philosophy since 2002. He received the Zois-Prize of Republic Slovenia for Outstanding Scientific Achievements in 2003. He is Initiator (1990) and President (1996) of the Phenomenological Society of Ljubljana and a member of several philosophical societies, project groups, editorial and scientific boards of journals for philosophy and culture (Phainomena, Nova Revija, Maggazino di filosofia, Prolegomena…). Founding member of the Central and Eastern European Conference in Phenomenology and of the Organization of Phenomenological Organizations. His research interests are: hermeneutics, phenomenology, philosophy of culture, philosophy of art, philosophical translation and terminology, European cultural identity and differences, interculturality, Slovene philosophy.
    Research interests
    Hermeneutics, phenomenology, philosophy of culture, anthropology, history of philosophy, philosophy of art, philosophical translation and terminology, Slovene philosophy, European cultural identity and differences.

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