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Theorie der Lebensformen: frühe Manuskripte aus der Bergson-Periode
1981
by
Schütz
Max Weber
Phenomenology
Edmund Husserl
Hans Kelsen
Verstehen
Political Philosophy
Austrian School
Eric Voegelin
Ludwig von Mises
Ideal Type
Methodology
Literature
Immanuel Kant
Rationality
Epistemology
Knowledge Economics
John Law
Determinism
A Priori
Aristotle
Adolf Wagner
Friedrich Nietzsche
Anthropology
Table of Contents · 68 segments
1
Front Matter and Table of Contents
chapter
2
Editorial Preface
essay
3
Contents of the Introduction: Schütz’s Bergson Reception
chapter
4
Preliminary Remarks on Bergson and Husserl in Schütz’s Early Project
essay
5
Sources and Character of the Early Manuscripts
essay
6
Logical and Meaningful Construction of the World
theoretical
7
Starting Points in Bergson and Max Weber
theoretical
8
Life Forms and Symbolic Meaning Structure
theoretical
9
The Life Form of Pure Duration
theoretical
10
The Life Form of Memory-Endowed Duration
theoretical
11
The Life Form of the Acting I
theoretical
12
The Life Form of the Thou-Oriented I
theoretical
13
The Life Form of the Speaking I
theoretical
14
The Life Form of the Conceptually Thinking I
theoretical
15
Manuscripts and Published Work: Overview of Continuities
essay
16
The Egological Approach
theoretical
17
Reflexive Formation of Meaning
theoretical
18
Grounding Intersubjectivity in the Parallel Durations of Two Selves
theoretical
19
Temporal, Spatial, and Social Dimensions of the World and the Pragmatic Access of the Self
theoretical
20
Language as Objectivated Experience and Everyday Typification
essay
21
Language as Part of the Context of Action
essay
22
Language Between Experience and Concept
essay
23
Language and Concept as First- and Second-Degree Constructions
essay
24
Concluding Consideration: Bergson, Husserl, and Schütz's Originality
essay
25
Notes to the Editorial Essay
footnotes
26
Life Forms and Meaning Structure: Introductory Problem of Experience, Space-Time, and the Thou
chapter
27
Pure Duration, Perception, Body, and the Provisional Emergence of Extension
chapter
28
Memory as Condition of Duration, Attention, and the Limits of Deriving Matter
chapter
29
The Epistemological Problem, Bergson's Body-Action Model, and the Path from Image to Concept
chapter
30
Aim of the Investigation: Weber, Understanding Sociology, the Thou, and Meaning
chapter
31
Memory, Retrospection, Meaning, and the First Symbolic Form
chapter
32
Clarifying Meaning: Symbol, Pure Perception, Memory, and the Unity of the I
chapter
33
Life Forms of Pure and Memory-Endowed Duration: Opening Program
chapter
34
Life-forms and the bipolar structure of symbolic relation
theoretical
35
Thesis 1a: identity of symbol and symbolized in lower life-forms
theoretical
36
Thesis 1b and the potentiality of symbols
theoretical
37
Symbol-setting, symbol-interpretation, and the anesthesia memory example
theoretical
38
Symbol systems, objective meaning, and the value consequence of symbolization
theoretical
39
Opening of the life-form of the acting ego and the problem of the body
chapter
40
Somatic life-feeling, bodily movement, and will
theoretical
41
Movement, memory, and the somatic component of action
theoretical
42
Bodily boundaries, extension, and the symbolization of space
theoretical
43
Intended Movement and the Irrelevance of Intermediate Points
theoretical
44
Ongoing Movement in Memory-Endowed Duration
theoretical
45
Elapsed Movement, Obstacles, and the Pseudo-Problem of Free Will
theoretical
46
Bodily Experience and the Difference Between the Moved and Acting Ego
theoretical
47
Excursus on Symbol Function, Life-Forms, and the Experiential A Priori
theoretical
48
Somatic Functional Nexus as Body, Extension, and Spatial Orientation
theoretical
49
The Extensive, Things, Space, and the Emergence of Dualism
theoretical
50
Ad B: From Ongoing Movement to Addable Elapsed Distance
theoretical
51
Completion of Life-Forms and Meaning-Structure: Symbolism of Elapsed Movement and Space-Time
theoretical
52
Experience, Language, and Concept: Programmatic Introduction and Life-Forms of Speech
essay
53
Substantives and Number: Naming, Singular Experience, Collectives, and Plural Formation
essay
54
Case, Subject-Predicate Relation, Objectivity, and the Origin of Adjectival Qualities
essay
55
Attributive and Predicative Adjectives: Sense-Interpretation, Sense-Setting, and Language as a Third Realm
essay
56
Meaning-Structure of Goethe’s Novelle, Section I: Language, Expression, Communication, and Literary Form
essay
57
Meaning-Structure of Goethe’s Novelle, Section II: Narrative Prose, Representation, Epic, and Poetic Sense-Laws
essay
58
Meaning-Structure of Goethe’s Novelle, Section III: Ambivalence of Poetic Sense-Laws and the Law of Unity
essay
59
Meaning of an Art Form: Artworks, Opera History, Drama, and the Du-Relation
essay
60
Music, Duration, Rhythm, Orchestra, and Oratorio in the Theory of Opera
essay
61
Mozart and Wagner as Types of Operatic Meaning: Stoff, Continuity, and the Du-Problem
essay
62
Appendix, Draft A: Outline of the Planned Study
chapter
63
Draft A Continued: Life Forms and the Concept of Symbol
theoretical
64
Draft B: Outline of Weber, Bergson, Life Forms, and Symbol Layers
theoretical
65
Draft C: Programmatic Critique of Epistemology and Plan for the Social Sciences
essay
66
Draft D: Life Forms, Symbolization, Kant, Bergson, and Consciousness Levels
essay
67
Editor’s Notes to the Drafts
footnotes
68
List of Abbreviations
bibliography