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CONTENTS
PREFACE
FOREWORD
INTRODUCTION
PART I. The Person and the Human Sciences
Chapter 1. Sciences, Psychology and Realism
Fritz Wallner, Kurt Durnwalder
Chapter 2. The Primacy of Action and Its Scientific Consequences for the Hermeneutics of the Human Sciences
G.B. Madison
Chapter 3. Philosophical Notions of the Person
George F. McLean
PART II. Phenomenology and Psychology
Chapter 4. Plurality in Social Psychology
Rolf Von Eckartsberg
Chapter 5. Phenomenology and Psychology Before and After the Phenomenological Reduction
Cheng-Yun Tsai
Chapter 6. Lao-Tze and Husserl: a Comparative Study of Lao-Tze's Method of Negation and Husserl's Epoché
Peter Kun-Yu Woo
PART III. Phenomenology and Human Consciousness
Chapter 7. Human Being and "Abgrund"
Chan Wing-Chuek
Chapter 8. Confucian Hsin and Its Twofold Functions: Psychological Aspects of Confucian Moral Philosophy, with an Excursus on Heidegger's Later Thought
Thaddeus T'ui-Chieh Hang
Chapter 9. Structure, Meaning and Critique
Vincent Shen
Chapter 10. Affective Difference: Sense and Singular Otherness
Ghislaine Florival
PART IV. Psychology as a Human Science
Chapter 11. An Exploration of Social Noesis
Tran Van Doan
Chapter 12. The Significance for Psychotherapy for Psychology as a Human Science
Charles Maes
Chapter 13. The Significance of Phenomenological Thought for the Development of Research Methods in Psychology at Duquesne University
William F. Fischer
Chapter 14. Towards a Human Scientific Approach to Developmental Psychology
Richard T. Knowles
Acknowledgements
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