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Chapter 7 Friedrich Hegel and Karl Marx
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Mark E. Blum
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Introduction The Genesis and History of Modern Phenomenological History and Historiography. An Overview 1
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Part I: Pre-Modern History of the Phenomenological Method of Discernment—Visual and Grammatical
- Chapter 1 Aristotle’s Visual and Verbal Phenomenology 19
- Chapter 2 Aquinas and Dante: the Early Renaissance and its Furtherance of Verbal Phenomenology 27
- Chapter 3 Giotto and the Furtherance of Visual Phenomenology 36
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Part II: Early Modern History through the Enlightenment and the Development of Visual and Verbal Phenomenological Discernment
- Chapter 4 Thomas Hobbes, Wilhelm Leibniz, and Johann Martin Chladenius and the Multiple Objectivities of Historical Thought 49
- Chapter 5 Johann Heinrich Lambert and Visual Phenomenological Understanding 64
- Chapter 6 Immanuel Kant Augmenting the Phenomenological Inheritance of Verbal and Visual Understanding 69
- Chapter 7 Friedrich Hegel and Karl Marx 76
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Part III: Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Verbal and Visual Phenomenological Discernment
- Chapter 8 Franz Brentano and the Advent of Modern Phenomenology 83
- Chapter 9 Edmund Husserl and Modern Phenomenology 87
- Chapter 10 Wilhelm Dilthey and Generational Metahistory: Towards a Phenomenological Model 95
- Chapter 11 Sigmund Freud and Carl Gustav Jung: The Phenomenology of the Spoken Word 100
- Chapter 12 Heinrich Wölfflin and a Metahistorical Phenomenological Approach to Visual History 105
- Chapter 13 Wassily Kandinsky and the Non-Euclidean Geometry of the Visual Image: A Phenomenological Understanding 112
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Part IV: Mid-Twentieth into the Twenty-First Century: Further Foundations towards a Thorough Phenomenological History and Historiography
- Chapter 14 Andrew Paul Ushenko and Stephen C. Pepper: the Further Development of Verbal and Visual Phenomenology 121
- Chapter 15 Hayden White’s Phenomenological Metahistorical and Metahistoriographical Writings 136
- Chapter 16 David Carr’s Essays on Phenomenological History and Historiography 142
- Chapter 17 Mark E. Blum’s Augmentations of Phenomenological Thought 154
- Chapter 18 Kurt Lewin, Towards a Phenomenology of Interpersonal Activity and Mutual Understanding 172
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Part V: Thorough Phenomenological Metahistory and Meta-Historiography in the Future: What is Needed
- Chapter 19 Grounding Metahistory and Meta-Historiography within a Phenomenologically-Based Interpersonal and Interdependent Comprehension 181
- Conclusion 190
- Bibliography 193
- Index 199
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Introduction The Genesis and History of Modern Phenomenological History and Historiography. An Overview 1
-
Part I: Pre-Modern History of the Phenomenological Method of Discernment—Visual and Grammatical
- Chapter 1 Aristotle’s Visual and Verbal Phenomenology 19
- Chapter 2 Aquinas and Dante: the Early Renaissance and its Furtherance of Verbal Phenomenology 27
- Chapter 3 Giotto and the Furtherance of Visual Phenomenology 36
-
Part II: Early Modern History through the Enlightenment and the Development of Visual and Verbal Phenomenological Discernment
- Chapter 4 Thomas Hobbes, Wilhelm Leibniz, and Johann Martin Chladenius and the Multiple Objectivities of Historical Thought 49
- Chapter 5 Johann Heinrich Lambert and Visual Phenomenological Understanding 64
- Chapter 6 Immanuel Kant Augmenting the Phenomenological Inheritance of Verbal and Visual Understanding 69
- Chapter 7 Friedrich Hegel and Karl Marx 76
-
Part III: Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Verbal and Visual Phenomenological Discernment
- Chapter 8 Franz Brentano and the Advent of Modern Phenomenology 83
- Chapter 9 Edmund Husserl and Modern Phenomenology 87
- Chapter 10 Wilhelm Dilthey and Generational Metahistory: Towards a Phenomenological Model 95
- Chapter 11 Sigmund Freud and Carl Gustav Jung: The Phenomenology of the Spoken Word 100
- Chapter 12 Heinrich Wölfflin and a Metahistorical Phenomenological Approach to Visual History 105
- Chapter 13 Wassily Kandinsky and the Non-Euclidean Geometry of the Visual Image: A Phenomenological Understanding 112
-
Part IV: Mid-Twentieth into the Twenty-First Century: Further Foundations towards a Thorough Phenomenological History and Historiography
- Chapter 14 Andrew Paul Ushenko and Stephen C. Pepper: the Further Development of Verbal and Visual Phenomenology 121
- Chapter 15 Hayden White’s Phenomenological Metahistorical and Metahistoriographical Writings 136
- Chapter 16 David Carr’s Essays on Phenomenological History and Historiography 142
- Chapter 17 Mark E. Blum’s Augmentations of Phenomenological Thought 154
- Chapter 18 Kurt Lewin, Towards a Phenomenology of Interpersonal Activity and Mutual Understanding 172
-
Part V: Thorough Phenomenological Metahistory and Meta-Historiography in the Future: What is Needed
- Chapter 19 Grounding Metahistory and Meta-Historiography within a Phenomenologically-Based Interpersonal and Interdependent Comprehension 181
- Conclusion 190
- Bibliography 193
- Index 199