"Käufer and Chemero have written a superb introduction to phenomenology, not merely as a chapter in intellectual history or as a gallery of great thinkers, but as a living tradition in philosophy, psychology, and cognitive science."Taylor Carman, Professor of Philosophy, Barnard College, Columbia University"A sparklingly clear and widely insightful introduction to phenomenology for beginners - which, if we are phenomenologists, includes all of us. Highly recommended."Gayle Salamon, Professor of English, Princeton UniversityPraise for the first edition:"A remarkably thorough and comprehensible account of the history of phenomenology that offers illuminating commentary on the work of Kant, Wundt, Husserl, Heidegger, Gestalt psychologists, Merleau-Ponty, Sartre, and Gibson."Hubert Dreyfus, Former Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Berkeley
AcknowledgementsList of FiguresIntroduction1 Kant: Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Background1.1 Kant's critical philosophy1.2 Intuitions and concepts1.3 The transcendental deduction1.4 Kantian themes in phenomenology2 The Rise of Experimental Psychology2.1 Wilhelm Wundt and the rise of scientific psychology2.2 William James and functionalism2.3 The structuralism-functionalism debate3 Edmund Husserl and Transcendental Phenomenology3.1 Transcendental phenomenology3.2 Brentano3.3 Between logic and psychology3.4 Ideas3.5 The body3.6 Phenomenology of time consciousness4 Martin Heidegger and Existential Phenomenology4.1 The intelligibility of the everyday world4.2 Descartes and occurrentness4.3 Being-in-the-world4.4 Being-with others and the anyone4.5 The existential conception of the self4.6 Death, guilt, and authenticity5 Gestalt Psychology5.1 Gestalt criticisms of atomistic psychology5.2 Perception and the environment5.3 Influence of Gestalt psychology6 Aron Gurwitsch: Merging Gestalt Psychology and Phenomenology6.1 Phenomenology of Thematics and of the Pure Ego6.2 Others and the Social World7 Jean-Paul Sartre: Phenomenological Existentialism7.1 Transcendence of the Ego7.2 The Imagination and The Imaginary7.3 Being and Nothingness8 Maurice Merleau-Ponty: The Body and Perception8.1 Phenomenology of Perception8.2 Phenomenology, psychology, and the phenomenal field8.3 The lived body8.4 Perceptual constancy and natural objects9 Critical Phenomenology9.1 The path not taken9.2 Phenomenology and Gender9.3 Phenomenology and Race10 James J. Gibson and Ecological Psychology10.1 Gibson's early work: Two examples10.2 The ecological approach10.3 Ecological ontology10.4 Affordances and invitations11 Hubert Dreyfus and the Phenomenological Critique of Cognitivism11.1 The cognitive revolution and cognitive science11.2 "Alchemy and artificial intelligence"11.3 What Computers Can't Do11.4 Heideggerian artificial intelligence12 Enactivism and the Embodied Mind12.1 Embodied, Embedded, Extended, Enactive12.2 The Original Enactivism12.3 Other Enactivisms: The sensorimotor approach and radical enactivism12.4 Enactivism as a Philosophy of Nature13 Phenomenological Cognitive Science13.1 The frame problem13.2 Radical embodied cognitive science13.3 Dynamical systems theory13.4 Heideggerian cognitive science13.5 The future of scientific phenomenologyReferencesIndex
Stephan Käufer is John Williamson Nevin Memorial Professor of Philosophy at Franklin and Marshall College.Anthony Chemero is Distinguished Research Professor of Philosophy and Psychology at the University of Cincinnati.