Marco Cavallaro (Ph.D., University of Cologne) is Assistant Professor at the Institute for Philosophy of the University of Koblenz-Landau. He earned his Ph.D. degree with a thesis on Husserl's System of a Theory of Science (forthcoming). He has published several articles on Husserl and phenomenology, including in Husserl Studies, Phänomenologische Forschungen, and Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology. He is co-editor of the volume Phenomenology of Phantasy and Emotions (WBG, 2022). His current research focuses on phenomenological ethics, philosophy of digitality, and philosophical anthropology.
PART I: HISTORICAL HORIZONS OF PHENOMENOLOGY OF EXISTENCE
Chapter 1. Husserl, Heidegger, and Jaspers in the 1920s and 1930s
Chapter 2. Kierkegaard and Husserl
Chapter 3. Husserl and Heidegger on radical responsibility and authentic existence
Chapter 4. Transcendental phenomenology and existential phenomenology
PART II: BASIC OUTLINES OF HUSSERL'S PHENOMENOLOGY OF EXISTENCE
Chapter 5. Essence and existence in Husserl
Chapter 6. The individual and the universal in Husserl
Chapter 7. The existential situatedness of the transcendental ego
Chapter 8. Birth, death, and sleep: Limit problems and the paradox of phenomenology
PART III: PHENOMENOLOGY, EXISTENTIALISM, AND EXISTENTIAL PHENOMENOLOGY
Chapter 9. Husserl's phenomenology of existence in Limit Problems of Phenomenology
Chapter 10. Husserl's transcendental phenomenology of ego, existence, and praxis
Chapter 11. Phenomenology, existence, and personhood
Chapter 12. Transcendental anthropology and existential phenomenology of happiness
Chapter 13. Existential dimensions of Husserl's late ethics
Chapter 14. Individualism and cosmopolitanism in Husserl's late ethics
Chapter 15. Husserl's "existentialist" ethics
Chapter 16. Husserlian ethics, embodied ethics, and feminist ethics
LITERATURE
INDEX
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS