ABSTRACT

This collection of essays explores the history, implications, and usefulness of phenomenology for the study of real and virtual places. While the influence of phenomenology on architecture and urban design has been widely acknowledged, its effect on the design of virtual places and environments has yet to be exposed to critical reflection. These essays from philosophers, cultural geographers, designers, architects, and archaeologists advance the connection between phenomenology and the study of place. The book features historical interpretations on this topic, as well as context-specific and place-centric applications that will appeal to a wide range of scholars across disciplinary boundaries. The ultimate aim of this book is to provide more helpful and precise definitions of phenomenology that shed light on its growth as a philosophical framework and on its development in other disciplines concerned with the experience of place.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter 4|9 pages

Postphenomenology and “Places”

chapter 6|18 pages

Transactions in Virtual Places

Sharing and Excess in Blockchain Worlds

chapter 7|29 pages

The Kyoto School Philosophy on Place

Nishida and Ueda

chapter 8|21 pages

Phenomenology of Place and Space in our Epoch

Thinking along Heideggerian Pathways

chapter 9|20 pages

Norberg-Schulz

Culture, Presence and a Sense of Virtual Place

chapter 12|13 pages

The Place of Others

Merleau-Ponty and the Interpersonal Origins of Adult Experience

chapter 13|19 pages

“The Place was not a Place”

A Critical Phenomenology of Forced Displacement