Karlheinz Muhr Library
Catalog
Timeline
Toggle theme
Ask the Librarian
Open menu
Catalog
Home
Catalog
Gesammelte Aufsätze I
1972
by
Schütz et al.
Phenomenology
Edmund Husserl
Verstehen
Methodology
Rationality
Max Weber
Ideal Type
Friedrich A. Hayek
Vilfredo Pareto
Fritz Machlup
Oligopoly
Positivism
Uncertainty
Teleology
Expectations
Ancient Philosophy
Aristotle
Plato
Determinism
John Locke
Valuation
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
A Priori
Empiricism
Anthropology
Interest Rates
Immanuel Kant
Causality
Epistemology
Subjective Value
Knowledge Economics
Political Philosophy
Spontaneous Order
Eric Voegelin
Table of Contents · 119 segments
1
Title Page and Publication Data
chapter
2
Preface by H. L. Van Breda
essay
3
Table of Contents
chapter
4
Contents Continuation and Opening of Aron Gurwitsch's Introduction
essay
5
Gurwitsch Introduction I: Husserl's Natural Attitude, Lifeworld, Intersubjectivity, and Typification
essay
6
Gurwitsch Introduction II: Schütz on the Everyday Social World, Stock of Knowledge, Biography, and Reciprocity of Perspectives
essay
7
Gurwitsch Introduction III: Face-to-Face Relations, Typification, Anonymity, and Understanding Subjective Meaning
essay
8
Gurwitsch Introduction IV: Social Science Method, Ideal Types, Dilthey, Husserl, and the Volume Title Page
essay
9
Methodology of the Social Sciences: Scientific and Common-Sense Constructions
essay
10
Second-Order Constructions in the Social Sciences
theoretical
11
Everyday Knowledge as Typified Constructs
theoretical
12
Intersubjectivity, Social Distribution of Knowledge, and Typification of the Social World
theoretical
13
Action, Motives, Social Interaction, and the Observer
theoretical
14
Rational Action in Everyday Experience (Beginning)
theoretical
15
Everyday Rationality and the Construction of Social-Scientific Objects
theoretical
16
Rational Action Models and the Homunculus Conclusion
theoretical
17
Concept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences: Positivism, Verstehen, and Social Reality
essay
18
Concept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences: Verstehen, Lifeworld, and Scientific Constructs
essay
19
Choosing Among Projects of Action
essay
20
The Concept of Action
theoretical
21
The Temporal Structure of the Project
theoretical
22
In-Order-To Motives and Because-Motives
theoretical
23
Fantasying and Projecting
theoretical
24
Executability and the Taken-for-Granted World
theoretical
25
Biographically Determined Situation and Interest Systems
theoretical
26
Doubting and Questioning
theoretical
27
Husserl on Problematic and Open Possibilities
theoretical
28
Choice Among Objects Within Reach
theoretical
29
Choice Among Projects
theoretical
30
Bergson’s Theory of Choice
theoretical
31
Leibniz’s Theory of Willing
theoretical
32
The Problem of Weights
theoretical
33
Summary and Conclusion
theoretical
34
Part II: Some Basic Concepts of Phenomenology, Introductory Problems and Cartesian Foundations
essay
35
Phenomenological Reduction and Bracketing of the World
essay
36
Noesis, Noema, Horizons, and Inner Time
essay
37
Ideal Objects, Signs, Semantics, and Constitution
essay
38
Formal Logic, Transcendental Logic, and Pre-Predicative Experience
essay
39
Eidetic Method and Imaginative Variation
essay
40
Phenomenological Psychology and the Foundations of Social Science
essay
41
Phenomenology and the Social Sciences: Editorial Note and Part I Programmatic Draft
essay
42
Husserlian Phenomenology and the Social Sciences: Part II Program and Sources
theoretical
43
Life-World as the Sense Foundation of Science and Four Foundational Questions
theoretical
44
Transcendental Reduction, Fremderfahrung, and Intersubjective Constitution
theoretical
45
Mathematization, Idealities, and Husserl’s Critique of Naturalism
theoretical
46
Constitutive Phenomenology of the Natural Attitude
theoretical
47
Mundane Life-World, Relevance, and Social Orientation
theoretical
48
Scientific Attitude, Ideal Types, and Max Weber’s Interpretive Sociology
theoretical
49
Husserl’s Importance for Social Sciences: Early Phenomenologists, Scheler, Merleau-Ponty, and Ortega
theoretical
50
Husserlian Analyses Applicable to Empirical Social Science
theoretical
51
Scheler’s Philosophical Anthropology and Concept of Person
theoretical
52
Scheler’s Theory of Intersubjectivity: Problems, Empathy, and Perception of the Other
theoretical
53
Transcendental Intersubjectivity and the Limits of Scheler and Husserl
theoretical
54
Mundane Intersubjectivity and Critique of Scheler’s We-Sphere
theoretical
55
General Thesis of the Alter Ego, Perception, and Perspectives
theoretical
56
Sartre’s Theory of the Alter Ego: Realist and Idealist Approaches
theoretical
57
Sartre’s Critique of Husserl, Hegel, and Heidegger
theoretical
58
Sartre’s Own Theory of the Other and the Gaze
theoretical
59
Sartre’s Theory of the Human Body
theoretical
60
Sartre, Husserl, and the Constitution of the Other
theoretical
61
Critical Remarks on Sartre: Practical Solipsism and Social Action
theoretical
62
Multiple Realities: Introduction and William James
essay
63
The Reality of Everyday Life: Natural Attitude and Pragmatic Motive
theoretical
64
Human Spontaneity, Conduct, Action, and Working
theoretical
65
Tensions of Consciousness and Attention to Life
theoretical
66
Time Perspectives of the Ego Agens and Their Integration
theoretical
67
Social Structure of the Everyday World
theoretical
68
Strata of Reality in the Everyday World of Working
theoretical
69
The World of Working as Paramount Reality and the Epoché of the Natural Attitude
theoretical
70
Multiple Realities and Their Constitution: Finite Provinces of Meaning
theoretical
71
The Various Worlds of Fantasy Representations
theoretical
72
The Dream World
theoretical
73
The World of Scientific Theory
theoretical
74
Language, Language Pathology, and Goldstein’s Theory of Speech
essay
75
Bergson on Matter, Memory, Aphasia, and Attention to Life
theoretical
76
Cassirer and the Pathology of Symbolic Consciousness
theoretical
77
Merleau-Ponty’s Existential Critique of Cassirer and the Intentional Arc
theoretical
78
Gurwitsch on Goldstein, Thematization, and Phenomenological Ideation
theoretical
79
Husserl on the Pre-Predicative Lifeworld, Typification, and Empirical Generality
theoretical
80
Relevance and Typification in Language Pathology
theoretical
81
Introductory Debates on Signs and Symbols
theoretical
82
Program of the Investigation and Transition to Apresentation
theoretical
83
Husserl’s Concept of Appresentation
theoretical
84
Domains Involved in the Appresentational Situation
theoretical
85
Bergson’s Theory of Parallel Orders
theoretical
86
Applying Bergson to Theories of Signs and Symbols
theoretical
87
Structural Change in Appresentation: Conditional Arbitrariness of the Meaning-Bearer
theoretical
88
Structural Change in Appresentation: Mutability of Appresentational Meaning
theoretical
89
The Principle of Figurative Transfer
theoretical
90
The World Within My Present and Potential Reach and the Manipulation Sphere
theoretical
91
Markers as Mnemonic Appresentations
theoretical
92
Indications and Natural Signs
theoretical
93
The Intersubjective World and Appresentational Relations: Signs
theoretical
94
Appräsentational Knowledge of Other Consciousness
theoretical
95
Reciprocity of Perspectives: Exchangeability of Standpoints
theoretical
96
Reciprocity of Perspectives: Congruence of Relevance Systems
theoretical
97
The Transcendence of the Other’s World
theoretical
98
Understanding, Manifestation, Signs, and Communication
theoretical
99
Manifestation: signs without intended communication
theoretical
100
Types of signs and bodily movements
theoretical
101
Communication as such: external signs, shared interpretation, and typification
theoretical
102
Language, visual representation, and expressive or imitative presentation
theoretical
103
The world within reach and the everyday world
theoretical
104
Transcendence of nature and society: the experience behind symbols
theoretical
105
Symbolization: Definition of the Symbol
theoretical
106
The Genesis of Symbolic Apresentation
theoretical
107
Specific Features of Symbolic Apresentation
theoretical
108
Multiple Realities: William James and Closed Provinces of Meaning
theoretical
109
Paramount Reality of Everyday Life
theoretical
110
Definition of the Symbol
theoretical
111
Shock Transitions between Provinces of Meaning
theoretical
112
Closed Provinces of Meaning in Scientific and Poetic Symbols
theoretical
113
Symbol and Society: Guiding Questions
theoretical
114
Social Dependence of Appresentational References
theoretical
115
Symbolic Appresentation of Society
theoretical
116
VIII. Concluding Remarks
theoretical
117
Appendix: Translators' Afterword
essay
118
Index of Names
bibliography
119
Subject Index
bibliography