TY - BOOK ID - 14301724 TI - The collected works of Aron Gurwitsch (1901-1973). AU - Gurwitsch, Aron. AU - Embree, Lester E. AU - Kersten, Fred. AU - Metraux, Alexandre. AU - Garcia-Gomez, Jorge. AU - Zaner, Richard M. PY - 2009 SN - 9048129419 9400730748 9786612839429 128283942X 9048129427 PB - Dordrecht ; London : Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Consciousness. KW - Phenomenology -- History. KW - Phenomenology. KW - Philosophy KW - Philosophy & Religion KW - Phenomenological psychology. KW - Psychological phenomenology KW - Psychology, Phenomenological KW - Philosophy. KW - Epistemology. KW - Modern philosophy. KW - History of Philosophy. KW - Modern Philosophy. KW - Existential psychology KW - Personality KW - Phenomenology KW - Psychology KW - Apperception KW - Mind and body KW - Perception KW - Spirit KW - Self KW - Phenomenology . KW - Genetic epistemology. KW - Philosophy (General). KW - Philosophy, modern. KW - Developmental psychology KW - Knowledge, Theory of KW - Philosophy, Modern KW - Modern philosophy KW - Mental philosophy KW - Humanities KW - Epistemology KW - Theory of knowledge KW - Knowledge, Theory of. KW - Philosophy, Modern. KW - Early Modern Philosophy. KW - History. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:14301724 AB - The second of a planned six volume of Gurwitsch’s writings, this volume is a corrected version of a collection he published in 1966. It was intended to complement the English edition of The Field of Consciousness (1964), which is the third volume of these Works in English. It contains his own introduction addressing his motivation as a phenomenologist and the situation at the time of publication. Included are English translations of his doctoral thesis, Phenomenology of Thematics and the Pure Ego (1929) and the substantial study based on his first Sorbonne lecture course, "Some Aspects and Developments of Gestalt Psychology" (1936), which made his name in Paris when he fled there from Germany after the rise of National Socialism. Other studies draw on the work in psychiatry of Kurt Goldstein and relate phenomenology to René Descartes, William James, Immanuel Kant, and tendencies in modern thought, thus complementing the historical perspectives resorted of in Vol. I. Thematic problematics addressed include the noema, the ego, eideation, and logic. ER -