Lucia Angelino
Researcher at the Archives Husserl (UMR 8547 – Pays Germaniques; Centre national de la recherche scientifique and École normale supérieure de Paris). She is a specialist in phenomenology working at the intersection of social philosophy and social psychology. Her most recent publications focus on collective intentionality, the relationship between the I and the We, and more specifically on the role of the Third in the Genesis of a We-perspective. As a scholar of contemporary philosophy, she is also interested in German and French philosophical anthropology and the way they contribute to a rethinking of the social phenomena, such as community building and community disruptions in a global age.
in English
X(2020). A frame of analysis for group improvisation on the bridge between Husserl’s phenomenology and some recent readings of the predictive coding model. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 19 (2), pp. 349-359.
(2020). Collective intentionality and the further challenge of collective Free Jazz improvisation. Continental Philosophy Review 53 (1), pp. 49-65.
(2016)., Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Paul Klee: Toward the roots of creative imagination and its cosmic dimension, in A. Tymieniecka & P. Trutty-Coohill (eds.), The cosmos and the creative imagination, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 181-195.
(2007). Re-reading Merleau-Ponty in the light of the unpublished writings (ii): one day conference at the Husserl Archives in Paris. Chiasmi International 9, pp. 493-497.