Journal | Contributors | Profile
Ian Angus
(2021). Groundwork of phenomenological marxism: crisis, body, world, Rowman & Littlefield, London.
(2020)., Husserl and America: reflections on the limits of Europe as the ground of meaning and value for phenomenology, in I. Apostolescu (ed.), The subject(s) of phenomenology, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 291-310.
(2017). Critique of reason and the theory of value: groundwork of a phenomenological marxism. Husserl Studies 33 (1), pp. 63-80.
(2017). Galilean science and the technological lifeworld: the role of Husserl's crisis in Herbert Marcuse's thesis of one-dimensionality. Symposium 21 (2), pp. 133-159.
(2012). The pathos of a first meeting: particularity and singularity the critique of technological civilization. Symposium 16 (1), pp. 179-202.
(2011). A conversation with Leslie Armour. Symposium 15 (1), pp. 72-93.
(2005). Bodies of meaning: studies on language, labor, and liberation. Symposium 9 (1), pp. 142-145.
(2005). Walking on two legs: on the very possibility of a Heideggerian marxism. Human Studies 28 (3), pp. 335-352.
(2004). In praise of fire: responsibility, manifestation, polemos, circumspection. The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 4, pp. 21-52.
(2001). Place and locality in Heidegger's late thought. Symposium 5 (1), pp. 5-23.
(1998). The gift of death. Symposium 2 (1), pp. 101-107.
(1994). A blank sheet of paper: the phenomenological foundation of comparative media theory. Human Studies 17 (1), pp. 9-22.
(1983). Disenchantment and modernity: the mirror of technique. Human Studies 6 (1), pp. 141-166.
(1980). Toward a philosophy of technology. Research in Phenomenology 10, pp. 320-327.
(1979). Review of Toward a phenomenology of rational action. Man and World 12 (3), pp. 298-321.