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This book brings together the author’s overall research trajectory of the last five years of his life and the questions he has been asking himself: What is the person? And, what are values? In answering the latter question, Hackett arrived at an answer within the boundaries of Max Scheler, the German phenomenologist, but consequently started to explore the depths of which Scheler’s value ontology was predicated on certain assumptions about the person. From these questions, Hackett started to draw upon philosophical approaches that thematize experience—pragmatism and phenomenology.
Persons and Values in Pragmatic Phenomenology
Explorations in Moral Metaphysics
by J. Edward Hackett
This book brings together the author’s overall research trajectory of the last five years of his life and the questions he has been asking himself: What is the person? And, what are values? In answering the latter question, Hackett arrived at an answer within the boundaries of Max Scheler, the German phenomenologist, but consequently started to explore the depths of which Scheler’s value ontology was predicated on certain assumptions about the person. From these questions, Hackett started to draw upon philosophical approaches that thematize experience—pragmatism and phenomenology.
Rooted in the
philosophical contributions of Scheler and the American philosopher, William
James, this book guides the reader through a fascinating exploration of these
philosophical approaches in relation to the person and values. Through
thematizing experience, this book reveals that the ontology of value for
Scheler resides not only in a person’s intentionality but also in the
being-of-an-act. As such, this book argues that the deficit of an ontology of
value in Scheler rests on interpreting his affective intentionality in much the
same way that Heidegger employed phenomenology to discern the ontological care
structure of Dasein. In other words, for Scheler, the ontology of value rests
on the manner in which values were realized by a person’s intentionality.
Moreover, this book goes further to reveal that the intentional act life is the
source of participation and can be understood as a process-based account of
value, otherwise known as account participatory realism. Importantly, within
participatory realism Hackett addresses how values have their origin in the
process of intentionality since intentionality is generative of meaning.
As an
important contribution to the field of moral metaphysics, Hackett’s critical
reflection on the person and values provides a stimulating insight into some of
the key debates surrounding pragmatism and phenomenology that will be of great
interest to both experienced scholars and researchers, alike.
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