Life Scientific Philosophy, Phenomenology of Life and the Sciences of Life: Ontopoiesis of Life and the Human Creative Condition
                        
                     
                                            
                            
                                                                by Anna-teresa Tymieniecka
                                                                
                                    2021-06-03 06:07:07
                                
                                
                             
                         
                                     
                
                    Life Scientific Philosophy, Phenomenology of Life and the Sciences of Life: Ontopoiesis of Life and the Human Creative Condition
                                            
                                                            by Anna-teresa Tymieniecka
                                                        
                                2021-06-03 06:07:07
                            
                            
                         
                                        
                                                                                                This collection brings to the public the fruits of the  groundlaying work on the philosophy/phenomenology of life presented in  some 30 volumes of the Analecta Husserliana, and inaugurates a  new phase in philosophy/phenomenology - a truly radical tu...
                                Read more
                                                This collection brings to the public the fruits of the  groundlaying work on the philosophy/phenomenology of life presented in  some 30 volumes of the Analecta Husserliana, and inaugurates a  new phase in philosophy/phenomenology - a truly radical turn.  
  As Tymieniecka in her introduction puts it, the time is ripe to  abandon the prejudices against empiria and set aside in a  `second position'' the epistemological/constitutive criterion of  validity and truth - without, however, abandoning it. To the  contrary: recognising with our present culture the overwhelmingly  superior validity of the pragmaticity test, which science indubitably  applies in its `verification'' of technology, philosophy/phenomenology  at last reaches the full significance of reality: the fullness of the  vital fact of life, which comprises not only the works and enjoyment  of the mind and the spirit, but those of the bios and the cosmos too.  
  The full-fledged dialogue with the hard-core sciences opens up;  philosophy of life and the human creative condition draws together all  the radiations of life into its field of inquiry. Tymieniecka thus  proposes a new mathesis universalis - the dream of  Leibniz and Husserl - which can at least be fulfilled.
                             Less