TY - BOOK ID - 1091101 TI - Phenomenological psychology : the Dutch school PY - 1987 VL - 98 SN - 9024735017 9024723396 9024729912 9401081050 9400935897 9024731461 9400950497 9789024735013 9789024729913 PB - Dordrecht Nijhoff DB - UniCat KW - Philosophical anthropology KW - Psychology KW - anno 1900-1999 KW - Netherlands KW - Phenomenological psychology KW - Academic collection KW - #GROL:SEMI-159.9<09> KW - 159.9.019 KW - Psychological phenomenology KW - Psychology, Phenomenological KW - Existential psychology KW - Personality KW - Phenomenology KW - Factors, Psychological KW - Psychological Factors KW - Psychological Side Effects KW - Psychologists KW - Psychosocial Factors KW - Side Effects, Psychological KW - Factor, Psychological KW - Factor, Psychosocial KW - Factors, Psychosocial KW - Psychological Factor KW - Psychological Side Effect KW - Psychologist KW - Psychosocial Factor KW - Side Effect, Psychological KW - 159.9.019 Psychologische systemen.--Scholen in de psychologie KW - Psychologische systemen.--Scholen in de psychologie KW - Phenomenological psychology. KW - Psychology. KW - Psychologie phénoménologique KW - Phénoménologie KW - Husserl (Edmund). (Versch. onderwerpen) KW - Phénoménologie. (Mélanges) KW - Husserl (Edmund). (Mélanges) KW - Fenomenologie. (Versch. onderwerpen) KW - Psychologie phénoménologique KW - Fenomenologische psychologie. KW - Transcendentalism KW - 165.62 KW - Philosophy KW - Philosophy, Modern KW - Idealism KW - 165.62 Fenomenologie KW - Fenomenologie KW - Husserl, Edmund KW - Husserl, Edmond KW - Phenomenology. KW - Transcendentalism. KW - Theory of knowledge KW - Husserl, Edmund, KW - Phenomenological psychology - Netherlands KW - Husserl, Edmund, - 1859-1938 KW - Psychologie phenomenologique KW - Allemagne KW - 20e siecle KW - Phenomenologie KW - Transcendantalisme KW - Essais UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:1091101 AB - These essays span a period of fourteen years. The earliest was written in 1960, the latest in 1983. They all represent various attempts to understand the motives and the central concepts of Husserl's transcen dental phenomenology, and to locate the latter in the background of other varieties of transcendental philosophy. Implicitly, they also con tain a defense of transcendental philosophy, and make attempts to respond to the more familiar criticisms against it. It is hoped that they will contribute to a better understanding not only of Husserl's transcen dental phenomenology but also of transcendental philosophy in gener al. The ordering of the essays is not chronological. They are rather divided thematically into three groups. The first group of six essays is concerned with relating Husserlian phenomenology to more contem porary analytic concerns: in fact, the opening essay on Husserl and Frege establishes a certain continuity of concern with my last published book with that title. Of these, Essay 2 was written for an American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division symposium in which the other symposiast was John Searle. The discussion in that symposium concentrated chiefly on the relation between intentionality and causali ty - which led me to write Essay 6, later read as the Gurwitsch Memo rial Lecture at the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philos ophy meetings in 1982 at Penn State. ER -