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Full Description
Given the current mainstream landscape of philosophy, one might assume that phenomenology is merely a tradition, a perspective, or a method of philosophizing among others. Likewise, one might assume that ontology and metaphysics—despite being concerned with everything and anything there is—are just subfields of philosophy, such that one could engage in philosophy without engaging in ontology or metaphysics. This volume rejects both assumptions. Instead, it situates phenomenology, particularly in the context of the English-speaking world, in the philosophical tradition that attempts to achieve a unitary concept of philosophy as such, everywhere animated by ontological and metaphysical questions. The essays collected here attend first to the seminal determination of the concepts in Husserl and Heidegger, then to reformulations by Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, Derrida, and Deleuze, challenging standard narratives about the end of metaphysics and the limits of philosophy as phenomenology.
Contents
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Vicente Muñoz-Reja and Zachary J. Joachim
1 Husserl's Transformation of Ontology
John J. Drummond
2 Where am "I"? the Phenomenology and Ontology of Self
David Woodruff Smith
3 Husserl's Monadology
Daniel O. Dahlstrom
4 Husserl's Phenomenology, Plato's Dialectic and Aristotle's First Philosophy: an Essay on Intentional History
Burt C. Hopkins
5 Heidegger's Rethinking of Ontology and Metaphysics
Daniela Vallega-Neu
6 Indirect Ontology, Open History, and Nature as Silence in Merleau-Ponty's 'Anti-Metaphysical' Ontology
David Morris
7 Beyond Object Constitution, or: Reading Levinas' "Metaphysics" with Genetic Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis
Bettina Bergo
8 Missing the Mark: Aestheticization, Structure Inattention, and 'Dark Phenomenology'
Deborah Goldgaber
9 "The Phenomenon Closest to the Noumenon": on the Other in Deleuze's Difference and Repetition
Leonard Lawlor
Index