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E-raamat: Groundwork of Phenomenological Marxism: Crisis, Body, World

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Beginning from the program for phenomenology set forth in Edmund Husserls The Crisis of the European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology, Ian H. Angus investigates the crisis of reason in a contemporary context. In Groundwork of Phenomenological Marxism: Crisis, Body, World, Angus connects the late work of Marx to human motility, natural fecundity (excess), and ecology. Anguss overall conception of phenomenology is Socratic in that it is concerned with the presuppositions and application of knowledge-forms to their lifeworld grounding. He argues that the crisis produced by the formalization of reason creates an inability to foster differentiated community as expected by both Husserl and Marx and that the formalization of human motility by the regime of value reveals the ontological productivity of natural fecundity (excess) and shows the priority of ecology as the contemporary exemplary science. Husserls idea of Europe as the home for philosophy is surpassed. Angus further argues that the contemporary task for Socratic phenomenology is in the epochal confrontation between planetary technology and place-based Indigeneity. He demonstrates that community and labor depend upon natural fecundity (excess) and locates their realization in the dialogue between civilizational-cultural lifeworlds, especially with respect to their ecological formation and access to transcendentality. This book lays out the fundamental concepts of a systematic phenomenological Marxian philosophy.

Arvustused

"Groundwork of Phenomenological Marxism is an extraordinary tour de force. The passionate and relentlessly erudite scholarship that unfolds on these pages is at once staggeringly wide and impressively deep. Through meticulous yet critical reinterpretations of Husserl and Marx, Ian Angus establishes a systematic parallel that gives an unprecedented boost to phenomenological Marxism as a project of radical critique, and on this basis goes on to develop a powerful and auspicious new philosophical framework for confronting the global crises of the twenty-first century. Angus book is an achievement of the highest importance that will inspire many readers for years to come." -- Bryan Smyth, University of Mississippi

Muu info

Winner of Book Award 2022.
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xi
Abbreviations in Citations xiii
PART I PHENOMENOLOGY and the CRISIS of MODERN REASON
Introduction: Modem Reason, Crisis, Meaning and Value
3(10)
1 Overview and Structure of the Craw
13(24)
PART II OBJECTIVISM and the RECOVERY of SUBJECTIVITY
2 Modem Science and the Problem of Objectivism
37(50)
3 Galilean Science and the One-Dimensional Lifeworld
87(24)
4 The Institution of Technique as Digital Culture
111(18)
5 Representation and the Crisis of Value
129(22)
Concluding Remark to Part II
147(4)
PART III THE LIVING BODY and ONTOLOGY of LABOR
6 Science and the Lifeworld
151(26)
7 Ontology of Labor and the Inception of Culture
177(54)
8 The Regime of Value
231(64)
9 Technology in Living Labor
295(40)
10 Nature and the Source of Value
335(22)
Concluding Remark to Part III
353(4)
PART IV TRANSCENDENTALITY and the CONSTITUTION of WORLDS
11 The Paradox of Subjectivity and the Transcendental Field
357(36)
12 Limits of Europe and the Planetary Event
393(26)
13 America and Philosophy: Planetary Technology and Place-Based Indigeneity
419(26)
14 Philosophy as Autobiography: the Thankful Critic
445(18)
15 Excess and Nothing
463(24)
Concluding Remark to Part IV
483(4)
PART V SELF-RESPONSIBILITY as TELEOLOGICALLY GIVEN in TRANSCENDENTAL PHENOMENOLOGY
16 Self-Responsibility for Humanity and for Oneself
487(22)
Bibliography 509(16)
Detailed Table of Contents 525(8)
Index 533(6)
About the Author 539
Ian H. Angus is professor emeritus of humanities at Simon Fraser University.