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Kimberly Baltzer-Jaray

1977

Adjunct at King’s University College (UWO). She is a specialist of Adolf Reinach and Munich phenomenology, with a focus on the realist responses of the early students of Edmund Husserl to his new idealist path of Transcendental Phenomenology. Her current research includes a large project that focuses on Munich phenomenology and the Psychology intimately bound with it, with a particular focus on Theodor Lipps’ phenomenology and the lasting influence it had on both Reinach and Johannes Daubert, and a smaller, ongoing project concentrating on the translation of Reinach’s WWI notebooks and completing his military journey. Her other interests include the Existential philosophies of Benjamin Fondane and Albert Camus, Dadism, and tattoo aesthetics and history. She is the president of the North American Society for Early Phenomenology (NASEP), a founding member of Forum Münchener Phänomenologie International (FMPI), associate editor of the Journal of Camus Studies, a board member of the Centre for Tattoo History and Culture, and occasional writer for Things & Ink and DISARM.

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Copyright (2009) Doorway to the world of essences: Adolf Reinach & the early phenomenological movement, Saarbrücken, VDM Verlag.
Open Access Link with Mitscherling Jeff (2012) Symposium 16 (2).
Copyright Selected papers on the early phenomenology of Munich and Göttingen, , , .
Copyright (2016) "Reinach's phenomenology of foreboding: Battlefield notes, 1916-17", in: Kelly Michael R, Harding Brian (ed), Early phenomenology: Metaphysics, ethics, and the philosophy of religion, London, Bloomsbury, pp.67-86.
Copyright (2013) "The Wesen of things, according to Reinach", Quaestiones Disputatae 4 (1), pp.66-81.
Open Access Link (2009) "Adolf Reinach is not a Platonist", Symposium 13 (1), pp.100-112.
Open Access Link (2006) "Reinach and Bolzano: towards a theory of pure logic", Symposium 10 (2), pp.473-502.
Copyright (2016) "The intentional being of justice and the foreseen", in: Elsby Charlene, Massecar Aaron (ed), Essays on aesthetic genesis, Lanham, University Press of America, pp.65-76.
Open Access Link with Mitscherling Jeff (2012) "The phenomenological spring: Husserl and the Göttingen circle", Symposium 16 (2), pp.1-19.
Copyright (2016) "Reinach and Hering on essence", Discipline Filosofiche 26 (1), pp.123-143.
Open Access Link (2018) "Phenomenological approaches to the uncanny and the divine: Adolf Reinach and Gerda Walther on mystical experience", in: Calcagno Antonio (ed), Gerda Walther's phenomenology of sociality, psychology, and religion, Dordrecht, Springer, pp.149-167.
Open Access Link (2016) "Phenomenological jurisprudence: a reinterpretation of Adolf Reinach's Jarhrbuch essay", in: Simmons J Aaron; Hackett James Edward (ed), Phenomenology for the twenty-first century, New York, Palgrave Macmillan, pp.117-137.
Open Access (2019) Review: Bacigalupo Giuliano; Leblanc Hélène, Anton Marty and contemporary philosophy, Phenomenological Reviews 5, pp.41.
Open Access Link (2005) "Gadamer's repercussions: reconsidering philosophical hermeneutics", Symposium 9 (2), pp.417-419.
Open Access Link (2004) "The philosophy of Gadamer", Symposium 8 (1), pp.141-142.
Open Access Link (2011) "Austrian phenomenology: Brentano, Husserl, Meinong, and others on mind and object", Symposium 15 (2), pp.209-212.
Open Access Link (2020) Review: Apostolescu Iulian, The subject(s) of phenomenology, Phenomenological Reviews 6, pp.66.
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