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Herbert Spiegelberg

from Munich to North America

Carlo Ierna

pp. 151-166

The chapter contains a brief intellectual biography of Herbert Spiegelberg, building on his numerous autobiographical remarks. It provides a survey of Spiegelberg's early life and works and his German period, focusing more extensively on his American period. The chapter considers in some detail three important themes in Spiegelberg's works. First, Spiegelberg's role in spreading and developing the phenomenological method in the United States through the organization of his workshops, based on ideas from his teachers Reinach and Pfänder to phenomenologize "co-subjectively". Second, his life-long concern with the development of a phenomenological ethics and the detailed development of the core notion of "deontic state of affairs' (Sollverhalt). Last but not least, his monumental contribution to the historiography of phenomenology with his The Phenomenological Movement. The chapter takes a critical look at the early controversies with Farber on the idea of a phenomenological "movement" in order to clarify and qualify Spiegelberg's own conception of phenomenology. The chapter is meant as a companion piece to the translation of Karl Schuhmann's unpublished article "Phenomenological Ontology in the Work of Herbert Spiegelberg: Ideas and Ontic and Deontic States of Affairs' which will appear in the second volume.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-99185-6_9

Full citation:

Ierna, C. (2019)., Herbert Spiegelberg: from Munich to North America, in M. B. Ferri & C. Ierna (eds.), The reception of Husserlian phenomenology in North America, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 151-166.

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