- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > Philosophy
- > 20th century, 21st century
Full Description
This book offers insight into early phenomenological ethics and its continuing relevance for contemporary ethical issues. It brings together a wide range of seasoned and up-and-coming scholars on the phenomenology of key figures in early phenomenological ethics on a diverse set of topics ranging from historical scholarship to applied ethics. It is the first to focus specifically on how early phenomenologists answer the specifically ethical question of how we should live, as opposed to focusing only on axiology and/or meta-ethics. Rather than seeking the moral law in detached reason, the early phenomenologists saw the questions of ethics as deeply connected with the lived experience of other persons, the moral beauty of the virtues, the reasons of the heart, and, above all, the experience of love. For all of them, crisis was the spur of ethical thought in early phenomenology and bringing renewal its telos.
The first part of the volume focuses on the history of ethical thought in the early phenomenological movement, focusing on the questions of what is unique in early phenomenological ethical thought and how it can be brought in relation to earlier and subsequent movements. The second part of the volume will showcase how this path is still worth taking in the face of our own contemporary ethical crises in the 21st century. It appeals to students, researchers and professionals.
Contents
Chapter 1 Technology Integrated Disability Rehabilitation: A Modern Paradigm Shift.- Chapter 1 Editors' Introduction- Chapter 2 Persons as Values and Creators of Value: Husserl, Scheler, Stein (and Weil)- Chapter 3 Feeling the Good - And Doing It. Husserl's Axiological Ethics- Chapter 4 The Appearance of Inquiry in Edmund Husserl's Ethics- Chapter 5 Kant's Imperfect Duty and Husserl's Value- Chapter 6 The Ethical Implications of Will and Attention in Husserl- Chapter 7 Practicing the Epoché: Transforming Social Justice on the U.S. Mexico Border- Chapter 8 Phenomenology of Time and Exhaustion in Early Motherhood- Chapter 9 Scheler's Reconciliation of Morality and Emotions- Chapter 10 This Love Between This Self and This Other: Max Scheler and the Ethical Crisis of the Twentieth Century- Chapter 11 "Anthroponauts Lost at Sea" or The Necessity of Values in our Personal Life- Chapter 12 Gateways to the Possibility of Ethical Life: Hedwig Conrad-Martius' Path- Chapter 13 The Hidden Vision of an Ethics in the Act of Empathy. And why Stein did not realize the Alternativity of Christian Ethics in Her Later Writings- Chapter 14 The Complexity of Human Being and Its Ethical Dimension According to Edith Stein- Chapter 15 On Forming Members of the Human Community: Edith Stein and the Ethics of Education- Chapter 16 Empathy vs. Alienation: On the Phenomenological Constitution and Erasure of Borders with Edith Stein- Chapter 17 Phenomenology and Personalism in the Ethics of Dietrich von Hildebrand- Chapter 18 Reverence in Nature: Sketching a Hildebrandian Environmental Ethic.



