METODO

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Steven Laycock

(1989). Actual and potential omniscience. International journal for philosophy of religion, 26, 65-88.

with Hart, J.G. (eds) (1986). Essays in phenomenological theology. Albany: SUNY Press.

(1988). Foundations for a phenomenological theology. Lewiston, NY: Mellen Press.

(1990). God as the ideal: the all-of-monads and the allconsciousness. In D. Guerrière (Ed.). Phenomenology of the truth proper to religion (pp. 247-272). Albany: SUNY Press.

(1989). Harmony as transcendence: a phenomenological view. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 16, 177-201.

(1985). Hui-Neng and the transcendental standpoint. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 12 (2), 179-196.

(1993). Meanings and ideals: Elements of an Husserlian axiology. In A. Tymieniecka (Ed.). Manifestations of reason: life, historicity, culture reason, life, culture II (pp. 179-197). Dordrecht: Kluwer.

(1994). Mind as mirror and the mirroring of the mind: Buddhist reflections on Western phenomenology. Albany: SUNY Press.

(1991). Nothingness and emptiness: exorcising the shadow of God in Sartre. Man and World, 24 (4), 395-407. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01248946.

(1991). Telic divinity and its atelic ground. Phenomenological Inquiry, 15, 93-105.

(1994). Telic divinity and its atelic ground. In A. Tymieniecka (Ed.). From the sacred to the divine (pp. 43-54). Dordrecht: Kluwer.

(1986). The intersubjective dimension of Husserl's theology. In S. Laycock, & J. G. Hart (Eds.). Essays in phenomenological theology (pp. 169-186). Albany: SUNY Press.

(1994). The phenomenologist's Anselm. In A. Tymieniecka (Ed.). From the sacred to the divine (pp. 293-305). Dordrecht: Kluwer.

(1997). The value of absence. In L. Embree (Ed.). Phenomenology of values and valuing (pp. 63-80). Dordrecht: Springer.

(1976). Undecidables and old (odd?) names: Derrida's deconstruction and introduction to Husserl's "Origin of geometry". Atlanta: Emory University.