Roman Ingarden (1893-1970) belonged to those phenomenologists who never accepted Husserl’s transcendental idealism. He devoted a great part of his intellectual energy to the „preparatory“ analytical studies in which he hoped to develop an ontological framework suitable for an ultimate refutation of Husserl’s idealistic doctrine. In these works we find a rich arsenal of ontological tools which is interesting even for those philosophers who are not interested in the subtleties of the Husserlian tradition or esoteric dialectics of the idealism / realism debate. Contributors: Arkadiusz Chrudzimski (Szczecin and Salzburg), Gregor Haefliger (Fribourg), Guido Küng (Fribourg), Jeff Mitscherling (Guelph), Andrzej Póltawski (Cracow), Peter Simons (Leeds), Edward Swiderski (Fribourg), Amie L. Thomasson (Miami), Daniel von Wachter (Munich).
- Veröffentlicht am Mittwoch 15. Juni 2005 von De Gruyter
- ISBN: 9783110325027
- 226 Seiten
- Genre: 20., 21. Jahrhundert, Hardcover, Philosophie, Softcover