All Stories

  1. The origins of sedimentation in Husserl's phenomenology
  2. Pain, as a Theme in Phenomenology
  3. Multiple Realities, as a Theme in Phenomenology
  4. Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology of Sedimentations
  5. Destiny, Love and Rational Faith in Husserl’s Post World War I Ethics
  6. Review of Contemporary Phenomenologies of Normativity: Norms, Goals, and Values (edited by Sara Heinämaa, Mirja Hartimo, and Ilpo Hirvonen)
  7. Multiple Realities
  8. Horizon, as a Concept in Phenomenology
  9. Pain, as a Theme in Phenomenology
  10. Absorption, as a Theme in Phenomenology
  11. Daydreaming and Self-Awareness
  12. PRO-CREATIVE FUNCTION OF PRODUCTIVE IMAGINATION IN KANT’S FIRST CRITIQUE. DISCUSSION REMARK ON THE BOOK OF SAULIUS GENIUSAS “PHENOMENOLOGY OF PRODUCTIVE IMAGINATION: EMBODIMENT, LANGUAGE, SUBJECTIVITY” (Ibidem-Verlag, Stuttgart, 2021. ISBN-13: 978-3-83...
  13. Paul Ricoeur’s Husserlian Heresies: The Case of the Cartesian Meditations
  14. Varieties of Self-Awareness
  15. Saulius Geniusas: Phenomenology of Productive Imagination. Embodiment, Language, Subjectivity
  16. Prolegomena to a phenomenology of mind-wandering
  17. What Is Immersion? Towards a Phenomenology of Virtual Reality
  18. Modes of Self-Awareness: Perception, Dreams, Memory
  19. WAR AS A PHENOMENOLOGICAL THEME: METHODOLOGICAL AND METAPHYSICAL CONSIDERATIONS
  20. Conscious and Unconscious Phantasy and the Phenomenology of Dreams
  21. The Phenomenology of Pain, written by Saulius Geniusas
  22. Grundlinien einer Phänomenologie der Versunkenheit
  23. DIALOGIC PHENOMENOLOGY OF PAIN EXPERIENCE SAULIUS GENIUSAS THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF PAIN. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 2020 ISBN 978-0-8214-2403-2
  24. Towards a Phenomenology of the Unconscious: Husserl and Fink on Versunkenheit
  25. The Phenomenology of Pain, Saulius Geniusas Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press; 2020 Hardcover ISBN: 978-0-8214-2403-2 Electronic ISBN: 978-0-8214-4694-2 Amazon.com $95.00
  26. Geniusas, Saulius: The Phenomenology of Pain
  27. Horizon
  28. “Multiple Realities” Revisited: James and Schutz
  29. The Phenomenology of Pain
  30. Relational Hermeneutics: Essays in Comparative Philosophy
  31. What Is Productive Imagination? The Hidden Resources of Husserl’s Phenomenology of Phantasy
  32. Hermeneutics and Phenomenology: Figures and Themes
  33. Editor’s Introduction
  34. Editorial Introduction
  35. NICOLAI HARTMANN ON THE VALUE OF AESTHETIC EXPERIENCE
  36. Editors’ Introduction: Relational Hermeneutics
  37. Editors’ Introduction: Hermeneutics and Phenomenology
  38. Hermeneutics and Phenomenology
  39. Relational Hermeneutics: Essays in Comparative Philosophy
  40. S. Geniusas, D. Nikulin (eds), Productive imagination
  41. S. Geniusas, Stretching the limits of productive imagination
  42. The Stuff that Dreams are Made of: Max Scheler and Paul Ricoeur on Productive Imagination
  43. ‘Things as They Are / Are Changed upon the Blue Guitar’: Self-Realization and Productive Imagination
  44. Phenomenology of Embodied Personhood and the Challenges of Naturalism in Pain Research
  45. On Pain, Its stratification, and Its Alleged Indefinability / Über den Schmerz, seine Schichtung und seine vermeintliche Undefinierbarkeit
  46. Hans-Georg Gadamer’s Concept of the Horizon and Its Ethico-Political Critique
  47. Pain and Intentionality
  48. Against the Sartrean Background: Ricoeur’s Lectures on Imagination
  49. Phenomenology of Chronic Pain: De-Personalization and Re-Personalization
  50. Vasily Sesemann’s Phenomenological Aesthetics
  51. The Pathos of Time
  52. The Spectacles of Pain and Their Contemporary Forms of Representation
  53. Between Phenomenology and Hermeneutics: Paul Ricoeur’s Philosophy of Imagination
  54. The Subject of Pain: Husserl’s Discovery of the Lived-Body
  55. The origins of the phenomenology of pain: Brentano, Stumpf and Husserl
  56. Saulius Geniusas: The Origins of the Horizon in Husserl’s Phenomenology
  57. The Question of Ethics in Heidegger’s Being and Time
  58. The Post-War Reception of Ideen I and Reflection
  59. The Problem of Signs in Heidegger's Being and Time
  60. The Origins of the Horizon in Husserl’s Phenomenology
  61. Indexicality as a Phenomenological Problem
  62. Conclusion
  63. Introduction
  64. Husserl’s Notion of the Primal Ego in Light of the Hermeneutical Critique
  65. Indexicality as a Phenomenological Problem
  66. James and Husserl: The Horizon as a Psychological and a Philosophical Theme
  67. The Horizon and the Origins of Sense-Formation
  68. The Reduction as the Disclosure of the Horizons of Transcendental Subjectivity
  69. The Static and Genetic Determinations of the Horizon
  70. The World-Horizon as the Wherefrom of Experience
  71. The World-Horizon as the Wherein of Experience
  72. The World-Horizon as the Whereto of Experience
  73. The World-Horizon in Ideas I
  74. William James and Edmund Husserl on the Horizontality of Experience
  75. The Question of the Subject: Jan Patočka’s Phenomenological Contribution
  76. On Birth, Death, and Sleep in Husserl’s Late Manuscripts on Time
  77. Husserl et la phénoménologie de la donation
  78. A Propaedeutic to Dialogue: "On The Oneness Of The Hermeneutical Horizon(s)" & "On The Importance Of Getting Things Straight"
  79. Is the Self of Social Behaviorism Capable of Auto-Affection?: Mead and Marion on the ?I? and the ?Me?
  80. Is the Self of Social Behaviorism Capable of Auto-Affection? Mead and Marion on the "I" and the "Me"
  81. Baudrillard's Raw Phenomenology
  82. Between Suspicion and Sympathy
  83. Between the Human and the Divine
  84. 13 On the Paradox of Perception and the Emergence of the Absolute Consciousness in Husserl's Phenomenology
  85. Skvernelis, Saulius
  86. What does the Question of Origins mean in Phenomenology?