ABSTRACT

Professor Grossman’s introduction to the revolutionary work of Husserl, Heidegger and Sartre studies the ideas of their predecessors too, explaining in detail Descartes’s conception of the mind, Brentano’s theory of intentionality, and Kierkegaard’s emphasis on dread, while tracing the debate over existence and essence as far back as Aquinas and Aristotle.

For a full understanding of the existentialists and phenomenologists, we must also understand the problems that they were trying to solve. This book, originally published in 1984, presents clearly how the main concerns of phenomenology and existentialism grew out of tradition.

part I|76 pages

The background

chapter 1|26 pages

Descartes: a new conception of the mind

chapter 2|39 pages

Brentano: the thesis of intentionality

part II|70 pages

Edmund Husserl: the problem of knowledge

part III|52 pages

Martin Heidegger: the meaning of being

chapter 9|14 pages

Heidegger's project

chapter 10|15 pages

Modes of being

chapter 11|21 pages

The nature of existence

part IV|76 pages

Jean-Paul Sartre: the quest for freedom

chapter 12|25 pages

The structure of mind

chapter 13|25 pages

The origin of nothingness

chapter 14|24 pages

The pliancy of the past