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Husserl's Later Philosophy of Natural Science
(1987)
Husserl argues in the Crisis that the prevalent tradition of positive
science in his time had a philosophical core, called by him "Galilean
science", that mistook the quest for objective theory with the quest for ...
Phenomenology and the Philosophy of the Natural Sciences
(2003)
In the assessment of scientific theory and practice, the critique of the analytic/empiricist
view of science made via the phenomenological orientation of Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-
Ponty and others towards the Lifeworld ...
The Methodological Role of Angst in Being and Time
(Taylor and Francis, 2011-08-10)
Heidegger’s analysis of the mood of angst is usually understood in terms of its contribution to the account of authenticity in Division II of Being and Time. I approach the analysis of angst from a different direction, by ...
The Scope of Hermeneutics in Natural Science
(1998)
Hermeneutics or interpretation is concerned with the generation,
transmission, and acceptance of meaning within the lifeworld and was the
original method of the human sciences stemming from F. Schleiermacher and W. ...
Fleck's Contribution to Epistemology
(1986)
Ludwik Fleck opposed the two most prominant schools of the philosophy of
science of his time: the Logical Positivism of Carnap, Schlick and others of the
Vienna Circle, and the Historicism of Durkheim, Levy-Bruhl, ...
Heisenberg and radical theoretic change
(1975)
Heisenberg, in constructing quantum mechanics, explicitly followed certain
principles exemplified, as he believed, in Einstein's construction of the special
theory of relativity which for him was the paradigm for radical ...