RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HOPE: PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE PANDEMIC-FORCED RETURN TO SOCIALITY Cover Image
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RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HOPE: PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE PANDEMIC-FORCED RETURN TO SOCIALITY
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HOPE: PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE PANDEMIC-FORCED RETURN TO SOCIALITY

Author(s): Erika Natalia Molina Garcia
Subject(s): Philosophy, Social Philosophy
Published by: Editura Alma Mater
Keywords: standard account of hope; hope; phenomenology; intersubjectivity; moral emotions;

Summary/Abstract: The subjective, intersubjective, and mystical or theological dimensions of hope have puzzled philosophers for centuries. Nevertheless, hope rarely seems to be the central matter. The inclination is rather to judge it morally, as positive or negative, and then nourish previously taken metaphysical stances with the writings emerging from these positions. In Husserlian phenomenology and discourses derived from it that tend to be less judgmental and more descriptive, hope is studied as a complex intentional act engaging consciousness of time, affectivity, and alterity, to later be compared to similar intentional modalities, like protention, desire and expectation. In this article, I propose to focus on intersubjectivity, by drafting a social phenomenology of hope.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 29
  • Page Range: 81-91
  • Page Count: 11
  • Language: English
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