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(1985) Phenomenology in practice and theory, Dordrecht, Springer.

Existential phenomenology and applied philosophy

Thomas Attig

pp. 161-176

The philosopher loves wisdom for its potential contributions to meaningful living. The wise person is mindful of the means to refinement of concepts and ideas and aware of the possibilities of their use, misuse and abuse. He strives to minimize distortion, disrespect and compromise of the integrity and uniqueness of the objects of conceptualization and ideation and to maximize truthfulness. He is ever aware of the need for, and yet sensitive to the limits of, the application of static concepts and ideas to a flowing experience of a dynamic reality. He has a will to sustain the dialectical tensions between the abstract and the concrete, the necessary and the contingent, the universal and the particular, the collective and the individual, theory and experience, and theory and practice. Ultimately, the wise person has the virtue of discernment, creativity and humility in making claims to truth in science, religion, morality, social and political thought, aesthetics and everyday living.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-9612-6_10

Full citation:

Attig, T. (1985)., Existential phenomenology and applied philosophy, in W. Hamrick (ed.), Phenomenology in practice and theory, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 161-176.

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