All Stories

  1. Being You — Or Not: A Challenge for Garfield and Seth
  2. Defining key concepts for mental state attribution
  3. My v Ja alebo Ja v My? Kolektívna intencionalita a jastvo
  4. Experience, Subjectivity, Selfhood: Beyond a Meadian Sociology of the Self
  5. Is there anyone here who has a genuine medical problem? Health, illness and Aristotle
  6. Group‐identification, collectivism, and perspectival autonomy
  7. Introduction: Husserl and community
  8. I and We: Hannah Arendt, Participatory Plurality, and the Literary Scaffolding of Collective Intentionality
  9. Observation, Interaction, Communication: The Role of the Second Person
  10. From communication to communalization: a Husserlian account
  11. Applied Phenomenology
  12. Individuality and community: The limits of social constructivism
  13. Sociality and Embodiment: Online Communication During and After Covid-19
  14. Comment: Debating Empathy: Historical Awareness and Conceptual Precision
  15. Consciousness, philosophy, and neuroscience
  16. Bare attention, dereification, and meta-awareness in mindfulness
  17. The Distinction Between Second-Person and Third-Person Relations and Its Relevance for the Psychiatric Diagnostic Interview
  18. Disorder of Selfhood in Schizophrenia: A Symptom or a Gestalt?
  19. The Heidelberg School and the Limits of Reflection
  20. Critical phenomenology and psychiatry
  21. Fenomenologia nos estudos de enfermagem
  22. Du, Ich und Wir
  23. Can we train basic empathy? A phenomenological proposal
  24. Embodied subjectivity and objectifying self‐consciousness: Cassam and phenomenology
  25. We in Me or Me in We? Collective Intentionality and Selfhood
  26. Center for Subjectivity Research: History, Contribution and Impact
  27. Basic empathy: Developing the concept of empathy from the ground up
  28. The Routledge Handbook of Metametaphysics
  29. The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Consciousness
  30. Dark and Bright Empathy
  31. Levinas and Analytic Philosophy
  32. Husserl on Hume
  33. The practice of phenomenology: The case of Max van Manen
  34. Phenomenology in nursing studies: New perspectives: Authors' response to Morley (2019)
  35. Locked-In Syndrome: a Challenge to Standard Accounts of Selfhood and Personhood?
  36. Applied phenomenology: why it is safe to ignore the epoché
  37. Getting It Quite Wrong: Van Manen and Smith on Phenomenology
  38. New Horizons in Philosophy of Mind. Interview with Prof. Dan Zahavi
  39. Introduction
  40. Manhattan Dynamite and no pancakes: Tradition and normality in the work of Tove Jansson
  41. Consciousness, Self-Consciousness, Selfhood: a Reply to some Critics
  42. Causation, constitution and context
  43. Collective Intentionality and Plural Pre‐Reflective Self‐Awareness
  44. Ownership, Memory, Attention: Commentary on Ganeri
  45. Brain, Mind, World: Predictive Coding, Neo-Kantianism, and Transcendental Idealism
  46. Emotional sharing and the extended mind
  47. Tu, Io, e Noi. La condivisione delle esperienze emozionali
  48. Second-Person Engagement, Self-Alienation, and Group-Identification
  49. Analytic and Continental Philosophy: From Duality Through Plurality to (Some Kind of) Unity
  50. Openness versus interdependence: A reply to Kyselo
  51. The end of what? Phenomenology vs. speculative realism
  52. Phenomenology of Experiential Sharing: The Contribution of Schutz and Walther
  53. Empathy≠sharing: Perspectives from phenomenology and developmental psychology
  54. On Self, Empathy, and Shame
  55. Phenomenology of reflection
  56. Nordic perspectives on phenomenology: an introduction
  57. Self and other: from pure ego to co-constituted we
  58. Husserl and the Transcendental
  59. “Getting the Left Right”
  60. Você, eu e nós: o compartilhamento de experiências emocionais
  61. Vindicating Husserl’s Primal I
  62. Edmund Husserl
  63. Contemporary Phenomenology at Its Best: Interview With Professor Dan Zahavi
  64. Empathy and Other-Directed Intentionality
  65. Intersubjectivity
  66. Rediscovering Psychopathology: The Epistemology and Phenomenology of the Psychiatric Object
  67. Comment: Basic Empathy and Complex Empathy
  68. The Experiential Self: Objections and Clarifications
  69. Empathy, Embodiment and Interpersonal Understanding: From Lipps to Schutz
  70. Bergson and Phenomenology
  71. Is the Self a Social Construct?
  72. Naturalized Phenomenology
  73. Recent developments in philosophy of psychopathology
  74. First-personal self-reference and the self-as-subject
  75. Perception of Duration Presupposes Duration of Perception – or Does it? Husserl and Dainton on time
  76. Killing the straw man: Dennett and phenomenology
  77. The Heidelberg School and the Limits of Reflection
  78. Intentionality and the representative theory of perception
  79. Constitution and ontology: Some remarks on Husserl's ontological position in the Logical Investigations
  80. Unraveling the Meaning of Survivor Shame