Susan Gottlöber completed her Magister and PhD studies at Technische Universität Dresden, Germany. She is currently Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at Maynooth University, Ireland, and served as the President of the Irish Philosophical Society from 2015 to 2018. Her main research interests are philosophical anthropology with a focus on inter-subjectivity, individuality, embodiment, and human nature in relation to technology. Her work also focuses on philosophy of toleration and value theory.
Introduction
Susan Gottlöber
Part One: New Perspectives
1 Chapter
Max Scheler and Concepts of the Tragic in European Philosophy of the Twentieth Century
Mikhail Khorkov
2 Chapter
Scheler's Anti-Representationalism: from Moral Illusions to Moral Facts
Gemmo Iocco
3 Chapter
Individual Destiny and Readiness for Self-Reorchestration. Exemplariness and Repentance as Overriding Keys to the Formation of Individuality
Bianca Bellini
4 Chapter
The World as 'Representation'. Scheler's Philosophy of Psychopathology
Roberta Guccinelli
5 Chapter
From Nationalism to Cosmopolitanism: Scheler's Political Trajectory
Zachary Davis
Part Two: Max Scheler as Interlocutor
6 Chapter
Value and Norm: Max Scheler's Material Value Ethics in Comparison with Windelband's Transcendent Value PhilosophyPluralism
Riku Yokoyama
7 Chapter
Erich Przywara's Critique of Max Scheler's Philosophy of Religion
Susan Gottlöber
8 Chapter
"A Manner Completely Incomparable to Every Knowledge Based on Experience." Scheler and Heidegger on the Philosophical Problem of Aging and Death
Christian Sternad
9 Chapter
K.E. Løgstrup's Critique of Scheler's Ethics 1932 and Beyond
Bjørn Rabjerg
Part Three: Max Scheler and Contemporary Thought
10 Chapter
The Redemption of Feeling: Non-Formal Ethics and Value Pluralism
Devin Fitzpatrick
11 Chapter
'Das Schema unseres Leibes'. Scheler's Forgotten Influence on the Contemporary Debate About Embodiment
Maria Chiara Bruttomesso
12 Chapter
'Ausgleich" and "Allmensch" in Confrontation with Contemporary Thought'
Eugene Kelly
13 Chapter
On The So Called 'Clash of Civilizations': Value Pluralism in the Light of Phenomenology
Roberta De Monticelli