Modern Movements in European Philosophy: Phenomenology, Critical Theory, StructuralismManchester University Press, 1995 M01 15 - 367 páginas In this now classic textbook, Richard Kearney surveys the work of nineteen of this century's most influential European thinkers, and acts as an introduction to three major movements: phenomenology, critical theory and structuralism. |
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
PHENOMENOLOGY Edmund Husserl | 12 |
Martin Heidegger | 28 |
CRITICAL THEORY Georg Lukács | 136 |
Water Benjamin | 151 |
STRUCTURALISM Ferdinand de Saussure | 240 |
Claude LéviStrauss | 252 |
Select bibliography | 343 |
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Términos y frases comunes
aesthetic alienation Althusser Althusser's analysis argues Barthes become Benjamin Bloch bourgeois capitalism concepts concrete consciousness contemporary Critical Theory critique culture Dasein deconstruction Derrida desire dialectical dialectical materialism discourse economic empirical essence existence existential experience expression fact Foucault Frankfurt School freedom Freud function Gramsci Habermas Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's hermeneutic human subject Husserl ibid ideal ideology imagination individual intellectual intentional interpretation intersubjective knowledge Kristeva Lacan language Lévi-Strauss linguistic logic logocentric Lukács Marcuse Marx Marx's Marxism materialism meaning Merleau-Ponty metaphysics mode modern myth mythemes nature negation notion object ontology original phenomenology philosophy political possible present Prison Notebooks psychoanalysis radical reality relations represents revolution revolutionary Ricoeur Roland Barthes role Sartre Saussure scientific semiology semiotic sense signifier signs social society speech structural Structural Anthropology structuralist symbolic temporal things thinkers traditional transcendence transcendental truth ultimate uncon unconscious understanding universal utopian words writing