Cartesian Mediations, Paul J. Ennis argues that the immediacy sought after by Husserl is an example of the Sellarsian myth of the given. He then turns to the question of the self within transcendental phenomenology in light of Thomas Metzinger's claim that the self of traditional philosophy, conceived in light of developments in contemporary neuroscience, does not exist. Finally, Ennis presents Paul Churchland's Prototype Vector Activation theory of cognition as a better alternative to understanding the questions once posed by the phenomenological tradition." /> The slow death of phenomenology - Ennis Paul J. | sdvig press

The slow death of phenomenology

Paul J. Ennis

pp. 345-363


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