Phenomenology beyond philosophy approaches relatively new problems in our multidisciplinary tradition. In it there is much less scholarship on texts and much more investigation of things themselves. The methods of phenomenology relied on can appear different when not related to the usual philosophical problems. Many concepts are imported, so to speak, from philosophical phenomenology and adapted in new contexts and this would seem the most conspicuous feature of phenomenology beyond philosophy, i.e., originally philosophical concepts used in contexts beyond the traditional scope of philosophy in our tradition.
Table of Contents
Lester Embree, Introduction to Volume 5 (continued): Phenomenology beyond Philosophy
20. Gary Backhaus, Bioregionalism: Identification and Orientation as a Problem of Scale
21. W. S. K. Cameron, Socrates outside Athens: Plato, the Phaedrus, and the Possibility of “Dialogue” with Nature
22. Alberto J. L. Carrillo Canán and May Zindel, Digital Image and Cinema
23. Scott D. Churchill, “Second Person” Perspectivity in Observing and Understanding Emotional Expression
24. Maureen Connolly, Constructing a Curriculum of Place: Embedded Meaningful Movement in Mundane Activities for Children and Youth with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
25. Thomas D. Craig, How to Make a Photograph within the In/Visible World of Autism
26. Steen Halling, Psychology and the Eclipse of Forgiveness
27. Mark A. Hector and Judith E. Hector, Walt Whitman, Nursing, and Phenomenology
28. Hwa Yol Jung, Václav Havel’s New Statecraft of Responsible Politics
29. Chris Nagel, Exposure, Absorption, Subjection-Being-in-Media
30. Lori K. Schneider, Local Workers, Global Workplace, and the Experience of Place
31. David Seamon, Gaston Bachelard’s Topoanalysis in the 21st Century: The Lived Reciprocity between Houses and Inhabitants as Portrayed by American Writer Louis Bromfield
32. M. Reza Shirazi, The Fragile Phenomenology of Juhani Pallismaa
33. Dennis E. Skocz, Keynesin Phenomenology and the Meltdown
34. Robert D. Stolorow, Portkeys, Ressurrective Ideology, and the Phenomenology of Collective Trauma
35. Sandra P. Thomas, Merleau-Ponty and James Agee: Guides to the Novice Phenomenologist
36. Osborne P. Wiggins and Michael Alan Schwartz, The Concept of Pathology and Psychiatry’s Need for a Philosophy of Life
37. Akihiro Yoshida, Living with Multiple Psychologies
38. Richard M. Zaner, Clinical Listening, Narrative Writing
Notes on Contributors
ISBN: 978–973–1997–75–9 (paperback)
ISBN: 978–973–1997–77–6 (ebook)