Phenomenology and cognitive science moving beyond the paradigms. Petitot, J., Varela, F. J., Pachoud, B., & Roy, J., editors Husserl Studies, 20:43–88, 2004. 00000 bibtex*:PetitotPhenomenologycognitivescience2004
doi  abstract   bibtex   
This is a remarkable and important collection of essays that explore fundamental elements, guiding principles, and initiating or resultant theses, under the overall aim to achieve a comprehensive, rigorous and methodologically sensitive investigation of “consciousness.” What is distinctive about the collection is that it represents a current, vigorously interactive effort on the part of researchers and thinkers in the two most pronounced programs given to investigating “consciousness”: on the one hand the newer work of cognitive science, and on the other the older but still energetic program of phenomenology. At the same time, the picture this volume presents is one of on-going effort in a project of inquiry, rather than its finalization in the achievement of proposed goals. The editors, in their long opening chapter, “Beyond the Gap: An Introduction to Naturalizing Phenomenology,” lay out the theses that represent the fundamental principles for the project in question, namely, “naturalizing phenomenology.” The general aim here is “integrating Husserlian phenomenology into contemporary cognitive science” (p. 1), with two overall ideas guiding the attempt.
@article{petitot_phenomenology_2004,
	title = {Phenomenology and cognitive science moving beyond the paradigms},
	volume = {20},
	doi = {10.1023/b:hstu.0000015941.08655.dc},
	abstract = {This is a remarkable and important collection of essays that explore fundamental elements, guiding principles, and initiating or resultant theses, under the overall aim to achieve a comprehensive, rigorous and methodologically sensitive investigation of “consciousness.” What is distinctive about the collection is that it represents a current, vigorously interactive effort on the part of researchers and thinkers in the two most pronounced programs given to investigating “consciousness”: on the one hand the newer work of cognitive science, and on the other the older but still energetic program of phenomenology. At the same time, the picture this volume presents is one of on-going effort in a project of inquiry, rather than its finalization in the achievement of proposed goals. The editors, in their long opening chapter, “Beyond the Gap: An Introduction to Naturalizing Phenomenology,” lay out the theses that represent the fundamental principles for the project in question, namely, “naturalizing phenomenology.” The general aim here is “integrating Husserlian phenomenology into contemporary cognitive science” (p. 1), with two overall ideas guiding the attempt.},
	journal = {Husserl Studies},
	editor = {Petitot, Jean and Varela, Francisco J. and Pachoud, Bernard and Roy, Jean-Michel},
	year = {2004},
	note = {00000 
bibtex*:PetitotPhenomenologycognitivescience2004},
	keywords = {Fenomenologia, ciência cognitiva, consciência, 🔍No DOI found},
	pages = {43--88},
}

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