Experience, Problematization, and the Question of the Contemporary

The Pluralist 7 (3):44-50 (2012)
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Abstract

I begin by expressing thanks to Paul Rabinow. As a Foucault scholar, I am personally indebted to him for that wonderful book he wrote with Hubert Dreyfus, Michel Foucault: Beyond Structrualism and Hermeneutics, which served as my introduction to the Foucauldian philosophical enterprise. I am honored to respond to his Coss lecture on the philosophical methods of Foucault and Dewey that shape his work in philosophy and anthropology.I begin by quoting two lengthy yet revealing passages—one from Foucault's "Life: Experience and Science" and the other from Dewey's "The Need for a Recovery of Philosophy"—that will set the stage for this discussion:Phenomenology expected "lived experience" to supply the originary meaning ..

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Brad Stone
Loyola Marymount University

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