Studies in Phenomenology



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THE REVIEW OF THE INTERNATIONAL INTERDISCIPLINARY CONFERENCE “TO LET THINGS BE! EDMUND HUSSERL 160, MARTIN HEIDEGGER 130”
(December 10-12, 2019, Riga, Latvia)

Title in the language of publication: THE REVIEW OF THE INTERNATIONAL INTERDISCIPLINARY CONFERENCE “TO LET THINGS BE! EDMUND HUSSERL 160, MARTIN HEIDEGGER 130”
(December 10-12, 2019, Riga, Latvia)
Author: INETA KIVLE, RAIVIS BIČEVSKIS, KRIŠJĀNIS LĀCIS
Issue: HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology.
Vol. 9, №1 (2020), 373-381
Language: English
Document type: Report
DOI : 10.21638/2226-5260-2020-9-1-373-381 PDF (Downloads: 2247)

Abstract
The current report gives an overview of The International Interdisciplinary Conference: To Let Things Be! Edmund Husserl 160, Martin Heidegger 130 , which took place at the University of Latvia, December 10-12, 2019. The report outlines the philosophical aims of the conference, analyses the contribution of the researchers from fifteen countries around the world, and introduces the main conclusions concerning the interdisciplinary development of phenomenology.

Key words
Phenomenology, hermeneutics, interdisciplinarity, Husserl, Heidegger.

References

  • Husserl, E. (1970). The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology. An Introduction to Phenomenological Philosophy. Evanston: Northwestern University Press.
  • Kivle, I., & Bičevskis, R. (2019). Conference Proceedings: International Interdisciplinary Conference: To Let Things Be! Edmund Husserl 160, Martin Heidegger 130 (December 10–12, 2019, Riga, Latvia). Riga: University of Latvia.
  • Patkul, A. (2015). Review of the International Conference “History of Phenomenological Philosophy and Contemporary Phenomenological Investigations” (November 11–12, 2014, Moscow, Russia). Horizon. Studies in Phenomenology, 4(1), 308–313. (In Russian).
  • Vēgners, U., & Grīnfelde, M. (2017). Report of the International Conference “Phenomenology and Aesthetics. The 3rd Conference on Traditions and Perspectives of the Phenomenological Movement in Central and Eastern Europe” (June 29 — July 1, 2017, Riga, Latvia). Horizon. Studies in Phenomenology, 6(2), 358–365.