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Das Problem der Relevanz
1971
by
Schütz
Phenomenology
Edmund Husserl
Max Weber
Methodology
Ancient Philosophy
Expectations
Rationality
Interest Rates
Political Philosophy
Teleology
Anthropology
Table of Contents · 57 segments
1
Front matter and table of contents
theoretical
2
Thomas Luckmann's introduction
essay
3
Chapter I: Introduction to the problem of relevance
chapter
4
Chapter II, Section A: Carneades and the Concept of the Plausible
theoretical
5
Husserl’s Problematic Possibilities and the Field of the Unproblematic
theoretical
6
Thematic Relevance, Familiarity, and Imposed versus Intrinsic Relevances
theoretical
7
Interpretive Relevance and the Rope-or-Snake Example
theoretical
8
Motivational Relevance, In-Order-To Motives, and Because-Motives
theoretical
9
Chapter III Opening and Habitual Stock of Knowledge
theoretical
10
Familiarity, Strangeness, Typicity, and the Taken-for-Granted
theoretical
11
Typicity and Interpretive Relevance
theoretical
12
Interest and Motivational Relevance
theoretical
13
Interest, Attention, and Motivational Relevances
theoretical
14
Stock of Knowledge, Interdependence of Relevance Systems, and Limits of the Analysis
theoretical
15
Open Problems After the Preliminary Relevance Analysis: Action, Reality, and Intersubjectivity
theoretical
16
Chapter IV Introduction: Genetic Analysis of the Heterogeneous Stock of Knowledge
theoretical
17
Degrees of Probability and Diexodos in the Stock of Knowledge
theoretical
18
Polythetic and Monothetic Reflection in Knowledge, Action, and Social Transmission
theoretical
19
Socially Acquired Knowledge, Communication, and Understanding Action
theoretical
20
Units of Meaning: Limits of Atomization and No Isolated Experience
theoretical
21
Embodied Organism, Disturbance, and Environment
theoretical
22
Gestalt Unity of External Objects and Movement
theoretical
23
Symbolic Systems, Language, Music, and Rhythms of Consciousness
theoretical
24
Projected Action as a Unity of Meaning in Sedimented Experience
theoretical
25
Temporal Sequence of Sedimentation and the System of Relevance
theoretical
26
Introduction to Disturbances of the Sedimentation Process
chapter
27
The Disappearance of the Theme through Shifts between Realities
theoretical
28
Symbols as Enclaves Created by Lost Themes
theoretical
29
Hypothetical Thematic Relevance, Signs, and Futurum Exactum
theoretical
30
Concealment of Thematic Relevance by a New Problem
theoretical
31
Temporarily Interrupted Processes: Neutralized and Marginal Themes
theoretical
32
Marginal Plans, Activation Relevance, and Habitualized Interruptions
theoretical
33
Psychology of Interruption, Counterpoint Consciousness, and the Stock of Knowledge
theoretical
34
Restarting the Process and Revising Habitual Knowledge
theoretical
35
Motivational Relevances and the Limits of Pragmatism
theoretical
36
Interpretive Relevances, Operationalism, and Methodology
theoretical
37
Conflicts of Relevance, Empty Places in Knowledge, and Autobiographical Rhythm
theoretical
38
Chapter VI: Structural Interpretation of the Stock of Knowledge and the Lifeworld
chapter
39
The Lifeworld’s Openness and Determinable Indeterminacy
theoretical
40
Regions of Reach, Action Projects, and Relevance
theoretical
41
Routine Activities and the World Beyond Question
theoretical
42
Acquaintance Knowledge and Familiarity
theoretical
43
Existential and Routine Knowledge In Hand
theoretical
44
Familiarity, Knowledge That, and the Opacity of the Lifeworld
theoretical
45
The Unasked but Knowable Unknown
theoretical
46
Recoverable Knowledge as a Meaning of the Unknown
theoretical
47
Recoverable Knowledge: Loss, Reconstruction, and Neutralization
theoretical
48
Unknown as Gaps and the Aporetic Function of Leerstellen
theoretical
49
Doubt, Negation, and Neutralized Knowledge
theoretical
50
Biographical Situation and Orientation in the Natural World
chapter
51
Own Body and Lived Space
theoretical
52
Here and There as Structures of Lived Space
theoretical
53
The World Within Reach and Topological Organization
theoretical
54
The Time Structure of the Taken-for-Granted World
theoretical
55
Appendix: Philosophy of the Empty Place and Anticipated Completion
essay
56
Socially Distributed Knowledge, Roles, and the Outline of Unknownness
essay
57
Philosophy of the Empty Place: Outline of Unknown Knowledge, Typification, and Relevance
theoretical