{"title":"Andrew D. Barrette","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eAndrew Barrette is Professor of the Practice at Boston College. Prior to that, he was a Visiting Professor and a Research Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies and Lonergan Institute, both at Boston College. He completed his dissertation at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, during which he was a Fullbright Scholar at the Husserl-Archives at KU-Leuven. He is also the translator of the first two volumes of \u003cem\u003eHusserlian Legacies: Themes for the 21st Century\u003c\/em\u003e and is currently finishing translations of Husserl's ethical lectures and manuscripts for Springer.\u003c\/p\u003e","products":[{"product_id":"the-origin-of-the-question-phenomenological-philosophy-after-edmund-husserl-andr-ebook","title":"The Origin of the Question: Phenomenological Philosophy after Edmund Husserl","description":"\u003cdiv\u003eI. First chapter: The Act and Intentional Essence of Inquiry.- Preliminary Remarks— Toward a logic of question and answer with the transcendental question.- A. Classical logic and the place of questions.- B. Provisional sketch of Husserl’s campaign against skepticism.- 1. Toward the essence of inquiry via intentional analysis.- A. Beginnings and breakthroughs of phenomenology.- B. Objectivating and non-objectivating acts and relevant relations of foundation.- C. The act of inquiry as mediating fulfillment: the logic of question-answer.- 2. Concluding remarks: the interior and exterior voice.- II. Second chapter: Toward the Source and Horizon of Acts of Inquiry.- Preliminary Remarks— The radicalization of the transcendental question.- A. An elucidation of δόξα and ἐπιστήμη vis-à-vis inquiry.- 1.  Natural and transcendental questions.- A. Metaphysics: the transcendental question and a demand for absolute cognition.- B. Doubt compared to inquiry.- C. Inquiry in the intuitive method of transcendental phenomenology.- 2. Natural inquiry within the world.- A. The pure ego as source of inquiry.- B. Inquiry in the natural practical attitude.- 3. Concluding Remarks: correlation analysis and the regressive procedure.- III. Third chapter: The Genesis of Inquiry.- Preliminary remarks—Toward a transcendental logic of question and answer.- A. Aristotle’s “analyses”: questions in science as about causes and origins.- 1. Husserl’s discovery and description of genesis.- A. Passivity and Activity.- B. Normativity as a theme of genetic phenomenology.- 2. Inquiry as a multi-layered striving for determination and differentiation.- A. The origin of inquiry in passivity.- B. Intellectus agens: the noetic activity of inquiry.- C. Interested and disinterested inquiry and the constitution of inquiring attitudes.- 3. Concluding Remarks: the need for further genetic analysis.- IV. Fourth Chapter: Knowing, valuing, and further reflections on inquiry and method.- Preliminary remarks—Ethics as a practical science.- A. The unity of the sciences and their unifying principle.- 1. The relationships of knowing and valuing.- A. Objectivation and Values.- B. The “Why and Because” in philosophical ethics.- 2. Some senses of method.- A. Methods and Techniques.- B. Leitfaden and Leitmotifs: Clues appearing in and obtaining between methods.- 3. Concluding remarks: toward a generative analysis of inquiry.- V. Fifth chapter: The generative roots of inquiry.- Preliminary Remarks—The question of history.- A. Principles and givenness.- 1. Preliminary sketch of some generative themes.- A. The home\/alien problematic in the question of generativity.- B. Instinct and reason.- 2. The generation of world-inquiry as participating in the world-horizon.- A. Birth, Childhood, and the development of instinct toward inquiry.- B. Instinct, Imitation, and the original question of history – Why?.- 3. From myth to philosophy: a transformation of the “Why” question.- A. Myth: meaning and value relative to the homeworld.- B. The meeting of mythical worlds and the appearance of wonder in Greece.- VI. Concluding Overview: from latent to patent unto manifest reason.- VII. Appendices.\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Andrew D. Barrette","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":53627858485575,"sku":"9783032135698","price":139.09,"currency_code":"EUR","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0920\/5455\/2903\/files\/the-origin-of-the-question-phenomenological-philos-ebook.webp?v=1775010863"}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0920\/5455\/2903\/collections\/andrew-d-barrette-autor-kollektion.webp?v=1775010861","url":"https:\/\/www.cinebuch.de\/collections\/andrew-d-barrette.oembed","provider":"CineBuch","version":"1.0","type":"link"}