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In: Western philosophy series
chapter 1 The Brentano Puzzle: An Introduction -- chapter 2 Who Needs Brentano? The Wasteland of Philosophy without its Past -- chapter 3 Introduction to Paul Linke's 'Gottlob Frege as Philosopher' -- chapter 4 Gottlob Frege as Philosopher -- chapter 5 Franz Brentano and the University of Vienna Philosophical Society 1888-1938 -- chapter 6 On Agents and Objects: Some Remarks on Brentanian Perception -- chapter 7 Perceptual Saliences and Nuclei of Meaning -- chapter 8 Brentano and the Thinkable -- chapter 9 From Empirical Psychology to Phenomenology. Edmund Husserl on the 'Brentano Puzzle' -- chapter 10 Brentano and Boltzmann: The Schubladenexperiment -- chapter 11 Johannes Daubert's Theory of Judgement -- chapter 12 On Alexius Meinong's Theory of Signs -- chapter 13 Linguistic Expressions and Acts of Meaning: Comments on Marty's Philosophy of Language.
In: Studien zur österreichischen Philosophie Band XLIV
Preliminary Material -- BRENTANO'S IMPACT /Guillaume Fréchette -- CONSCIOUSNESS. BRENTANIAN AND NEO-BRENTANIAN PERSPECTIVES -- BRENTANO'S MOST STRIKING THESIS: NO REPRESENTATION WITHOUT SELF-REPRESENTATION /Uriah Kriegel -- WHAT IS PRE-REFLECTIVE SELF-AWARENESS? BRENTANO'S THEORY OF INNER CONSCIOUSNESS REVISITED /Johannes L. Brandl -- UNITY WITHOUT SELF: BRENTANO ON THE UNITY OF CONSCIOUSNESS /Mark Textor -- VARIETIES OF INTENTIONALITY -- BRENTANO'S THESIS (REVISITED) /Guillaume Fréchette -- BRENTANO AND ARISTOTLE ON THE ONTOLOGY OF INTENTIONALITY /Arkadiusz Chrudzimski -- ANTON MARTY'S INTENTIONALIST THEORY OF MEANING /Laurent Cesalli -- PHENOMENOLOGY OF INTENTIONALITY /Matjaž Potrč -- ONTOLOGY AND METAPHYSICS -- BEING AS THE TRUE: FROM ARISTOTLE TO BRENTANO /Werner Sauer -- FRANZ BRENTANO'S MEREOLOGY /Wilhelm Baumgartner -- BRENTANO AT THE INTERSECTION OF PSYCHOLOGY, ONTOLOGY, AND THE GOOD /Susan Gabriel -- CRITICS AND HEIRS. THE SCHOOL OF BRENTANO -- MIXED FEELINGS. CARL STUMPF'S CRITICISM OF JAMES AND BRENTANO ON EMOTIONS /Denis Fisette -- THE INTENTIONALITY OF PLEASURES AND OTHER FEELINGS. A BRENTANIAN APPROACH /Olivier Massin -- BRENTANO AND STUMPF ON TONAL FUSION /Riccardo Martinelli -- EXPOSITIONS AND DISCUSSIONS. SELECTED MATERIALS AND TRANSLATIONS -- THERE AND BACK AGAIN. AN UPDATED HISTORY OF FRANZ BRENTANO'S UNPUBLISHED PAPERS /Thomas Binder -- ABSTRACTION AND RELATION, FOLLOWED BY SELECTED LETTERS FROM BRENTANO TO MARTY /Franz Brentano -- ABSTRACTION AND RELATION /Franz Brentano -- SELECTED LETTERS TO MARTY /Franz Brentano -- ABSTRAKTION UND RELATION /Franz Brentano -- AUSGEWÄHLTE BRIEFE AN MARTY /Franz Brentano -- MODERN ERRORS CONCERNING THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE LAWS OF INFERENCE /Franz Brentano -- MODERNE IRRTHÜMER ÜBER DIE ERKENNTNIS DER GESETZE DES SCHLIEßENS /Franz Brentano -- INDEX OF NAMES.
In: Routledge handbooks in philosophy
In: Cambridge companions to philosophy
In: The Cambridge Companions to Philosophy, Religion and Culture
Franz Brentano (1838–1917) led an intellectual revolution that sought to revitalize German-language philosophy and to reverse its post-Kantian direction. His philosophy laid the groundwork for philosophy of science as it came to fruition in the Vienna Circle, and for phenomenology in the work of such figures as his student Edmund Husserl. This volume brings together newly commissioned chapters on his important work in theory of judgement, the reform of syllogistic logic, theory of intentionality, empirical descriptive psychology and phenomenology, theory of knowledge, metaphysics and ontology, value theory, and natural theology. It also offers a critical evaluation of Brentano's significance in his historical context, and of his impact on contemporary philosophy in both the analytic and the continental traditions.
In: A Magyar Tudományos Akadémia elhúnyt tagjai fölött tartott emlékbeszédek 22,8
In: Synthese Library 333
"In many respects, Brentano conducted pioneering analyses of problems that are currently in the focus of cognitive science and artificial intelligence: from the problem of reference to that of representation, from the problem of categorial classification to ontology and the cognitive analysis of natural language. Brentano, in fact, dealt with and wrote on questions concerning the auditory stream (temporal apprehension), visual perception (continua, point of view, three-dimensional construction of phenomenal objects), intentionality, imagery, and conceptual space, considering these pertaining to a metaphysical enquiry. Moreover, Brentano displayed clear awareness of the complexity of problems and of the interrelations among different areas of inquiry. From this point of view, his theory, however complex, offers elements for the treatment of problems currently under investigation. Brentano's work is an antidote against physicalism and logicism, which dominated the 20th century epistemology, and as such appears to be a good philosophy candidate for cognitive science.""A set of knotty questions are implied in the very title of Brentano's work ""Psychology from an empirical standpoint"". To solve them, Albertazzi guides us systematically through Brentano's life and works, investigating into the inherent complexity of both his view of mental life and the related methodology. In so doing, she discloses a number of threads into the open texture of modern philosophy of mind."" Lia Formigari, Ordinary professor of Philosophy of Language, La Sapienza, Rome, Italy"
In: Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook Ser. v.24
Intro -- Editorial -- Contents -- Part I: Brentano and Austrian Philosophy -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Franz Brentano in Vienna -- 1.1 Descriptive Psychology and Phenomenology: Brentano and Husserl -- 1.2 Brentano and the Vienna Circle -- 1.3 Brentano and the History of Philosophy -- Chapter 2: Brentano and Husserl on Intentionality -- 2.1 Ancient and Medieval Background -- 2.2 Husserl, Bolzano and Frege -- 2.3 Bolzano -- 2.4 The Tripartite Distinction Act-Noema-Object -- 2.5 Brentano and Husserl on Intentionality -- 2.6 Some Further Features of Husserl's View -- 2.7 Object -- 2.8 Appendix -- 2.8.1 Husserl's Theory of Intentionality and the Interpretation of Aristotle's Philosophy -- 2.8.1.1 Aristotle -- 2.8.1.2 Husserl -- 2.8.1.3 Conflicting Interpretations of Aristotle -- 2.8.1.4 Aristotle and Husserl -- References -- Chapter 3: Descriptive Psychology and Phenomenology: From Brentano to Husserl to the Logic of Consciousness -- 3.1 Introduction: Brentano's Legacy in Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind -- 3.2 Descriptive Psychology, Phenomenology, and the Structure of Consciousness: From Brentano to Husserl -- 3.3 From Psychology to Phenomenology: Ideal/Logical Content in Consciousness -- 3.4 The Logic of the Phenomena of Consciousness: Meaning and Modality -- 3.5 The Ontology of Contents: From Phenomena to Their Species to Their Meaning -- 3.6 "Intentional In-Existence": A Modal Theory -- 3.7 "Inner Consciousness": A Modal Theory -- 3.8 Coda: Phenomenal Consciousness in Recent Philosophy of Mind -- References -- Chapter 4: Brentano's Concept of Descriptive Psychology -- 4.1 Franz Brentano's Family Connection to Newman's Catholic University -- 4.2 Brentano's New Psychology -- 4.3 Husserl's Conception of Descriptive Psychology (1891-1902) -- 4.4 Wilhelm Dilthey's Concept of Descriptive Psychology.