Description
Wilfrid Sellars tackled the difficult problems of reconciling Pittsburgh school–style analytic thought, Husserlian phenomenology, and the Myth of the Given.This collection of essays brings into dialogue the analytic philosophy of Wilfrid Sellars—founder of the Pittsburgh school of thought—and phenomenology, with a special focus on the work of Edmund Husserl. The book’s wide-ranging discussions include the famous Myth of the Given but also more traditional problems in the philosophy of mind and phenomenology such as thestatus of perception and imagination
nature of intentionality
concept of motivation
relationship between linguistic and nonlinguistic experiences
relationship between conceptual and preconceptual experiences
Moreover, the volume addresses the conflicts between Sellars’s manifest and scientific images of the world and Husserl’s ontology of the life-world. The volume takes as a point of departure Sellars’s criticism of the Myth of the Given, but only to show the many problems that label obscures. Contributors explain aspects of Sellars’s philosophy vis-à-vis Husserl’s phenomenology, articulating the central problems and solutions of each. The book is a must-read for scholars and students interested in learning more about Sellars and for those comparing Continental and analytic philosophical thought.
ContributorsWalter HoppWolfgang HuemerRoberta LanfrediniDanilo MancaKarl MertensAntonio NunzianteJacob RumpDaniele De SantisMichela Summa
This collection offers the first systematic, comparative analysis of Wilfrid Sellars’s Pittsburgh school of thought and Husserlian phenomenology. Beginning with an introduction to contemporary philosophical debates about the mind and pragmatism, the essays examine and clarify the discursive divide between analytic and Continental philosophy.
Daniele De Santis is an assistant professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Charles University, Prague. He is coeditor in chief of the New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy; he has recently published the book Husserl and the A Priori: Phenomenology and Rationality and coedited the Routledge Handbook of Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy.Danilo Manca is a junior assistant professor at the University of Pisa. He is the author of a book in Italian on Hegel and Husserl; he has coedited the volume Hegel and Phenomenology, and special journal issues including “Realism, Pragmatism, Naturalism: The Vicissitudes of Phenomenology in North America” in Discipline Filosofiche, “The Conceptual Framework of Persons: A Metaphilosophical Investigation” in Philosophical Inquiries, and “Pragmatism and Phenomenology” in the European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy.