Just Published: Phenomenology & Transcendental Idealism

Editors, and with an Introduction by Luz Ascarate, Quentin Gailhac, and Circé Furtwängler (Zeta Books, 2024). 4 sections, 16 chapters.

Phenomenology and Transcendental Idealism
ASCARATE, Luz; GAILHAC, Quentin; FURTWÄNGLER, Circé (eds.)
Zeta Books, 2024
https://zetabooks.com/all-titles/phenomenology-and-transcendental-idealism/

Phenomenology and Transcendental Idealism explores the nuanced and paradoxical interplay between phenomenology and idealism, examining how this complex relationship shapes the phenomenological method and its intersections with major idealist thinkers in the history of philosophy. This interdisciplinary approach enables contributors to address a range of themes—from the metaphysical foundations of phenomenology as a form of transcendental idealism to its application in concrete areas such as emotions, aesthetics, and philosophical anthropology. Through this exploration, the volume critically assesses the legitimacy of idealist positions within the phenomenological tradition, scrutinizing both the justification for and potential limitations of a phenomenological idealism.

Table of Contents

Luz Ascarate, Quentin Gailhac and Circé Furtwängler, “Introduction”

PART 1. CONCEPTS
Giulio Marchegiani, “Husserl’s Idealistic-Transcendental Turn as a Coherent Development of the Theory of Truth and Sense in the First Phase of his Phenomenology”
Daniel Stil, “The problem of embodiment of transcendental subjectivity in Husserl’s phenomenology”
Benjamin Straehli, “Does Science Need Transcendental Idealism? Pure Ego and Scientific Responsibility”
Zixuan Liu, “On the Unique Relationality of Intention as the Origin of Husserlian Transcendentality: A Laskian Critique of Phenomenal Intentionality”

PART 2. THE IDEALIST TRADITION
Quentin Gailhac, “Reason and World in Husserl and Whitehead. On two Paradoxical Monadologies.”
Luz Ascarate, “The possible and the transcendental Husserl’s Kantian legacy”
Michael Blézy, “The Persistence of Kant’s Thing-in-itself: The Case of Being and Time”
Christos Kalpakidis, “Realism and Freedom in Jean-Paul Sartre’s Being and Nothingness and F.W.J. Schelling’s Freedom Essay”

PART 3. BEYOND TRANSCENDENTAL IDEALISM
Jonas N’da Kouakou, “Merleau-Ponty’s reception of Husserlian phenomenology: Merleau-Ponty towards a ‘new transcendental phenomenology’”
Michaël Crevoisier, “The Sartrean modification of the transcendental concept. Moving beyond idealism to describe concrete existence”
Renaud Mallet, “The anthropological stakes of Henry’s critique of transcendental idealism”
Tareq Ayoub, “On the Hermeneutics of Kairos: Moving Beyond the Transcendental”
Reinan Ramos dos Santos, “Decentering transcendental ego with Heidegger and Patočka and the moment of post-phenomenology”

PART 4. APPLICATIONS
Maririta Guerbo, “Enzo Paci and Ernesto De Martino, crossed views on time and the practice of phenomenology”
Circé Furtwängler, “The materialization of the transcendental in the body”: Dufrenne’s reading of Merleau-Ponty”
Alexis Delamare, “Husserl’s Idealism at Work: The Example of the Transcendentalization of Value” [Open Access]
Bence Peter Marosan, “The Impact of Transcendental Turn on Husserl’s Early Notion of Metaphysics and his Peculiar Argument for the Existence of God”