The Development of Eco-Phenomenology as an Interpretative Paradigm of the Living World
The Development of Eco-Phenomenology as an Interpretative Paradigm of
內容簡介
Preface. Dr. DANIELA VERDUCCI, Co-President of The World Phenomenology Institute (European Division), University of Macerata, Macerata, Italy
PART 1. ENCHANTMENT OF LIFE, NATURE AND ONTOPOIETIC ECOSYSTEM Chapter 1. The Importance of Eco-phenomenology in the Understanding of Pandemic Crisis: New Turns and Concepts. Dr. habil. phil., MAIJA KŪLE, professor, senior researcher, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
Chapter 2. The Ontopoietic Phenomenology: Orchestrating an Ecological Vision of Life. CARMEN COZMA, professor, Department of Philosophy, "Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University of Iaşi, Iaşi, Romania
Chapter 3. Logos, Logic, and the Explication of Life. Dr. OLGA LOUCHAKOVA-SCHWARZ, Clinical Professor at the University of California, Davis Adjunct Lecturer in Spirituality and Phenomenology of Religion, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley, USA
Chapter 4. People on the E(e)arth: Eco-Phenomenological Turns of Life and Vital life Understanding in Current Situation of Humanism/Post-humanism. Dr. phil. ELLA BUCENIECE, senior researcher, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
Chapter 5. The Body as an Ontopoietic Ecosystem that Somatizes Otherness. ROBERTO MARCHESINI, Centre Study for Post-human Philosophy, Bologna, Italy
Chapter 6. Sharing-in-Life: Man, Nature, Community. Dr. philol., ZAIGA IKERE, professor, University of Daugavpils, city Daugavpils, Latvia
Chapter 7. Conscious and Unconscious Life - the Origins of Unconsciousness. BENCE PETER MAROSAN, Budapest Business School, College of International Management and Business, Budapest, Hungary
Chapter 8. Attitude and Neutralization. To the Origin of Fictions: "Being", "Nothingness", and "Time". VICTOR MOLCHANOV, professor, Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow, Russia
Chapter 9. The Concept of Life (Existence), Logos and Ontopoiesis. DOMINGUEZ REY ANTONIO, Departamento de Lengua Espa簽ola y Lingű穩stica General, Facultad de Filologia, Universidad Nacional de Educaci籀n a Distancia, Madrid, Spain
Chapter 10. Eco-Phenomenology and the Question of Being and Being-in -the -World. OLIVER HOLMES, Professor of European Intellectual History, Wesleyan University, USA
Chapter 11. The Harmony between Human and Cosmos as Problem of Sense. FRANCESCO TOTARO, professor, University of Macerata, city Macerata, Italy
Chapter 12. My Pen is Smarter then Me. (On the background of existential phenomenology, phenomenology of life by Tymieniecka Anna-Teresa and on the phenomenology of human person by American philosopher Robert Sokolowski). Dr. phil. MAMUKA DOLIDZE, professor, Tbilisi Javakhishvili State university, Tbilisi, Georgia.
Chapter 13. On Harmony. DEBIKA SAHA, Department of Philosophy, University of North Bengal, Darjeeling, West Bengal, India PART II. HUMAN CONDITION IN THE PANDEMIC ENVIRONMENT: SPACES, DWELLINGS, FEELINGS AND SENSATIONS
Chapter 14. Returning Home. ALGIS MICKUNAS, professor, Ohio University, USA
Chapter 15. Aesthetics of the Uncanny - Sacred Spaces and Environments. THOMAS RYBA, Director of Religious Studies, Senior Lecturer in Religious Studies and Philosophy at Purdue University, President of and Notre Dame Theologian for the Aquinas Educational FoundationSt. Thomas Aquinas Center, State West Lafayette, Indiana, USA
Chapter 16. Psychic Involvements and Spiritual Reactions at Time of the Pandemic Disease. A Phenomenological Philosophical and Psychopathological Approach. ANGELA ALES BELLO, professor, Pontifical
PART 1. ENCHANTMENT OF LIFE, NATURE AND ONTOPOIETIC ECOSYSTEM Chapter 1. The Importance of Eco-phenomenology in the Understanding of Pandemic Crisis: New Turns and Concepts. Dr. habil. phil., MAIJA KŪLE, professor, senior researcher, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
Chapter 2. The Ontopoietic Phenomenology: Orchestrating an Ecological Vision of Life. CARMEN COZMA, professor, Department of Philosophy, "Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University of Iaşi, Iaşi, Romania
Chapter 3. Logos, Logic, and the Explication of Life. Dr. OLGA LOUCHAKOVA-SCHWARZ, Clinical Professor at the University of California, Davis Adjunct Lecturer in Spirituality and Phenomenology of Religion, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley, USA
Chapter 4. People on the E(e)arth: Eco-Phenomenological Turns of Life and Vital life Understanding in Current Situation of Humanism/Post-humanism. Dr. phil. ELLA BUCENIECE, senior researcher, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia
Chapter 5. The Body as an Ontopoietic Ecosystem that Somatizes Otherness. ROBERTO MARCHESINI, Centre Study for Post-human Philosophy, Bologna, Italy
Chapter 6. Sharing-in-Life: Man, Nature, Community. Dr. philol., ZAIGA IKERE, professor, University of Daugavpils, city Daugavpils, Latvia
Chapter 7. Conscious and Unconscious Life - the Origins of Unconsciousness. BENCE PETER MAROSAN, Budapest Business School, College of International Management and Business, Budapest, Hungary
Chapter 8. Attitude and Neutralization. To the Origin of Fictions: "Being", "Nothingness", and "Time". VICTOR MOLCHANOV, professor, Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow, Russia
Chapter 9. The Concept of Life (Existence), Logos and Ontopoiesis. DOMINGUEZ REY ANTONIO, Departamento de Lengua Espa簽ola y Lingű穩stica General, Facultad de Filologia, Universidad Nacional de Educaci籀n a Distancia, Madrid, Spain
Chapter 10. Eco-Phenomenology and the Question of Being and Being-in -the -World. OLIVER HOLMES, Professor of European Intellectual History, Wesleyan University, USA
Chapter 11. The Harmony between Human and Cosmos as Problem of Sense. FRANCESCO TOTARO, professor, University of Macerata, city Macerata, Italy
Chapter 12. My Pen is Smarter then Me. (On the background of existential phenomenology, phenomenology of life by Tymieniecka Anna-Teresa and on the phenomenology of human person by American philosopher Robert Sokolowski). Dr. phil. MAMUKA DOLIDZE, professor, Tbilisi Javakhishvili State university, Tbilisi, Georgia.
Chapter 13. On Harmony. DEBIKA SAHA, Department of Philosophy, University of North Bengal, Darjeeling, West Bengal, India PART II. HUMAN CONDITION IN THE PANDEMIC ENVIRONMENT: SPACES, DWELLINGS, FEELINGS AND SENSATIONS
Chapter 14. Returning Home. ALGIS MICKUNAS, professor, Ohio University, USA
Chapter 15. Aesthetics of the Uncanny - Sacred Spaces and Environments. THOMAS RYBA, Director of Religious Studies, Senior Lecturer in Religious Studies and Philosophy at Purdue University, President of and Notre Dame Theologian for the Aquinas Educational FoundationSt. Thomas Aquinas Center, State West Lafayette, Indiana, USA
Chapter 16. Psychic Involvements and Spiritual Reactions at Time of the Pandemic Disease. A Phenomenological Philosophical and Psychopathological Approach. ANGELA ALES BELLO, professor, Pontifical
配送方式
-
台灣
- 國內宅配:本島、離島
-
到店取貨:
-
海外
- 國際快遞:全球
訂購/退換貨須知
加入金石堂 LINE 官方帳號『完成綁定』,隨時掌握出貨動態:
商品運送說明:
- 本公司所提供的產品配送區域範圍目前僅限台灣本島。注意!收件地址請勿為郵政信箱。
- 商品將由廠商透過貨運或是郵局寄送。消費者訂購之商品若無法送達,經電話或 E-mail無法聯繫逾三天者,本公司將取消該筆訂單,並且全額退款。
- 當廠商出貨後,您會收到E-mail出貨通知,您也可透過【訂單查詢】確認出貨情況。
- 產品顏色可能會因網頁呈現與拍攝關係產生色差,圖片僅供參考,商品依實際供貨樣式為準。
- 如果是大型商品(如:傢俱、床墊、家電、運動器材等)及需安裝商品,請依商品頁面說明為主。訂單完成收款確認後,出貨廠商將會和您聯繫確認相關配送等細節。
- 偏遠地區、樓層費及其它加價費用,皆由廠商於約定配送時一併告知,廠商將保留出貨與否的權利。
提醒您!!
金石堂及銀行均不會請您操作ATM! 如接獲電話要求您前往ATM提款機,請不要聽從指示,以免受騙上當!
退換貨須知:
**提醒您,鑑賞期不等於試用期,退回商品須為全新狀態**
-
依據「消費者保護法」第19條及行政院消費者保護處公告之「通訊交易解除權合理例外情事適用準則」,以下商品購買後,除商品本身有瑕疵外,將不提供7天的猶豫期:
- 易於腐敗、保存期限較短或解約時即將逾期。(如:生鮮食品)
- 依消費者要求所為之客製化給付。(客製化商品)
- 報紙、期刊或雜誌。(含MOOK、外文雜誌)
- 經消費者拆封之影音商品或電腦軟體。
- 非以有形媒介提供之數位內容或一經提供即為完成之線上服務,經消費者事先同意始提供。(如:電子書、電子雜誌、下載版軟體、虛擬商品…等)
- 已拆封之個人衛生用品。(如:內衣褲、刮鬍刀、除毛刀…等)
- 若非上列種類商品,均享有到貨7天的猶豫期(含例假日)。
- 辦理退換貨時,商品(組合商品恕無法接受單獨退貨)必須是您收到商品時的原始狀態(包含商品本體、配件、贈品、保證書、所有附隨資料文件及原廠內外包裝…等),請勿直接使用原廠包裝寄送,或於原廠包裝上黏貼紙張或書寫文字。
- 退回商品若無法回復原狀,將請您負擔回復原狀所需費用,嚴重時將影響您的退貨權益。




商品評價