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The History of Intentionality Ryan Hickerson

The History of Intentionality By Ryan Hickerson

The History of Intentionality by Ryan Hickerson


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Summary

Franz Brentano (1838-1917) is almost unique as a forefather of both Analytic and Continental philosophy. His claim to fame is the reintroduction of intentionality (the 'aboutness' of consciousness) to the modern philosophy of mind. This book offers interpretations of a central philosophical concept employed in the Brentano School.

The History of Intentionality Summary

The History of Intentionality by Ryan Hickerson

Franz Brentano (1838-1917) is almost unique as a forefather of both Analytic and Continental philosophy. His claim to fame is the reintroduction of intentionality (the 'aboutness' of consciousness) to the modern philosophy of mind. In the Analytic tradition this is treated as (or as closely akin to) representation. In the Continental tradition intentionality is the leitmotiv of phenomenology. Brentano attracted a variety of students during his lifetime, a group of influential philosophers, psychologists, and others. Ryan Hickerson's book offers new interpretations of a central philosophical concept employed in the Brentano School. He argues against the now-standard misreading of Brentano (in both the Analytic and Continental traditions) as Immanentist, i.e. someone who believed that mental contents exist solely within the mind. Hickerson does this by tracing Brentano's notion of a 'phenomenon' back to its origins in the French positivism of August Comte. He then displays Brentano's students as attempting to correct the 'problems' each found in Brentano's treatment of mental content, including: (1) Twardowski's division of subjective contents from worldly objects, his part in a sea change in representational theories at the dawn of the 20th Century; (2) Meinong's ontology of non-existent objects, the reaction to Brentano made infamous by Russell; and (3) Husserl's 'breakthrough to phenomenology,' his advancement of mental contents as ideal. The History of Intentionality is a continuing history; this book will be very valuable for present-day specialists and students in phenomenology and the philosophy of mind.

The History of Intentionality Reviews

Hickerson's work has opened up extremely illuminating perspectives. aThe results are fascinating, combining careful historical reconstruction with philosophical insight. Hickerson's prism brings order to the competing positions in the early development of phenomenology and the Brentano School; the book will be of interest to anyone who has tried to understand the distinctive mode of relation between experience and its objects. Wayne Martin, University of California, San Diego * Blurb from reviewer *

About Ryan Hickerson

Ryan Hickerson is a member of the editorial staff at Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy. He is the author of articles in The Journal of the History of Philosophy and elsewhere.

Table of Contents

Ch.1: Introduction: consciousness as mental content; Ch.2: Brentano's Problem: the doctrine of phenomena; Ch.3: Twardowski and the history of representation; Ch.4: Meinong: mental content as object theory; Ch.5: Husserl's phenomenology without phenomena; Ch.6: Conclusions; Bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NPB9780826486837
9780826486837
0826486835
The History of Intentionality by Ryan Hickerson
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2007-06-23
192
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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