336 Pages
    by Routledge

    330 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in English in 1984, this collection of essays documents a dialogue between phenomenology and Marxism, with the contributors representing a cross-section from the two traditions. The theoretical and historical presuppositions of the phenomenology inaugurated by Husserl are very different from those of the much older Marxist tradition, yet, as these essays show, there are definite points of contact, communication and exchange between the two traditions.

    Preface  Part 1: Concepts and Methods  1. Phenomenology and Marxism in Historical Perspective Fred Dallmayr  2. Marxism and the Hermeneutic Tradition Marek J. Siemek  3. The Problem of Teleology and Corporeality in Phenomenology and Marxism Ludwig Landgrebe  4. Overcoming the Opposition Between Idealism and Materialism in Husserl and Marx Ante Pažanin  5. Towards an Open Dialectic Bernhard Waldenfels  6. The Unity of Theory and Praxis as a Problem for Marxism, Phenomenology and Structuralism Jan M. Broekman  7. Ideology and Ideology Critique Paul Ricoeur  Part 2: Practical Philosophy  8. Life-world and the Historicity of Human Existence Ludwig Landgrebe  9. Marx’s Critique of Morality as an Introduction to the Problem of his Philosophy as a Whole Ivan Urbančič  10. Behavioural Norm and Behavioural Context Bernhard Waldenfels  11. ‘Meaning in the Use’ OR On the Irrelevance of the Theory of Meaning for Practical Philosophy Jan M. Broeckman  12. Merleau-Ponty’s Critique of Marxist Scientism John O’Neill