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(1973) Martin Heidegger, Dordrecht, Springer.

Language and two phenomenologies

Don Ihde

pp. 147-156

I have three concurrent concerns in this paper. The first is to display a picturable model of some of the main features of phenomenological method. I wish in this case to clarify some of the complexities and implications of a phenomenological procedure for a philosophical context often more Anglophilic and Europophobic than not. But on the way to this end I wish also to begin the sketch of what I hope will become a considered re-interpretation of phenomenological history. I wish to differentiate two distinguishable, but often confused, lines of development from a common base in Husserlian thought.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-1981-1_10

Full citation:

Ihde, D. (1973)., Language and two phenomenologies, in E. Ballard & C. E. Scott (eds.), Martin Heidegger, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 147-156.

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