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Enacting a conversation between the work of Edmund Husserl and Sigmund Freud, this groundbreaking work presents the fruit of 20 years of research in phenomenology, the history of neurology, psychoanalysis, and metapsychology. It shows how we might think critically about the history of philosophy of mind, mobilizing a pluralistic approach to embodiment, embeddedness in the world, as well as about the relationship between first and third-person standpoints.

Produktbeschreibung
Enacting a conversation between the work of Edmund Husserl and Sigmund Freud, this groundbreaking work presents the fruit of 20 years of research in phenomenology, the history of neurology, psychoanalysis, and metapsychology. It shows how we might think critically about the history of philosophy of mind, mobilizing a pluralistic approach to embodiment, embeddedness in the world, as well as about the relationship between first and third-person standpoints.
Autorenporträt
Bettina Bergo is Professor of Philosophy at the Université de Montréal. She is the author of Anxiety: A Philosophical History (OUP 2021), and Levinas: Essays on Phenomenology, Hermeneutics, and Jewish Thought (Brill 2025). She is the co-editor of several collections, including "I don't see color!": Personal and Critical Perspectives on White Privilege (2015), The Trauma Controversy (2009), and Levinas and Nietzsche: After the Death of a Certain God (2008). She is also a scholar and translator of Levinas, critical studies in psychoanalysis and the history of psychology, hermeneutics, and Nietzsche's philosophy.