James Mensch
Professor am Institut für Philosophie der Charles Universität Prag.
His main areas of research are phenomenology and its contemporary applications. He has lectured widely both in America and Europe and serves on a number of editorial and research boards. Mensch is the author of ten books on phenomenology and its applications. His most recent books are Husserl’s Account of our Consciousness of Time (Marquette University Press, 2010) and Embodiments: From the Body to the Body Politic (Northwestern University Press, 2009). His book on Levinas is currently under review at Northwestern.
Temporality and embodied self-presence
2020
Continental Philosophy Review 53/2
The economy of sacrifice and embodiment
2018
Metodo 6/2
The intertwinning of binding and unbinding in the religions of the Book
2018
Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory 17/2
Patočka's transformation of phenomenology
2017
AUC Interpretationes 7/1
The spatiality of subjectivity
2016
Symposium 20/1
Formalisation and responsibility
2015
in: The phenomenological critique of mathematisation and the question of responsibility, Dordrecht : Springer
The intertwining as a form of our motion of existence
2013
Chiasmi International 15
The question of naturalizing phenomenology
2013
Symposium 17/1
Zu einem neuen phänomenologischen Paradigma politischen Denkens
2012
in: Gelebter Leib – verkörpertes Leben, Würzburg : Königshausen & Neumann
Patočka and artificial intelligence
2011
in: Jan Patočka and the heritage of phenomenology, Dordrecht : Springer
The intertwining of incommensurables
2007
in: Phenomenology and the non-human animal, Dordrecht : Springer
Manifestation and the paradox of subjectivity
2005
Husserl Studies 21/1
2001
The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 1
Husserl's concept of the future
1999
Husserl Studies 16/1
1997
in: Encyclopedia of phenomenology, Dordrecht-Boston-London : Kluwer
1994
Journal of Philosophical Research 19
Phenomenology and artificial intelligence
1991
Husserl Studies 8/2
Existence and essence in Thomas and Husserl
1988
in: The horizons of continental philosophy, Dordrecht : Springer