Stratification of Emotional Life (Scheler)

Stratification Of Emotional Life (Scheler)

Max Scheler (1874–1928) was an early 20th-century German Continental philosopher in the phenomenological tradition. Scheler's style of phenomenology has been described by some scholars as “applied phenomenology”: an appeal to facts or “things in themselves” as always furnishing a descriptive basis for speculative philosophical concepts. One key source of just such a pattern of facts is expressed in Scheler’s descriptive mapping of human emotional life (the “Stratification of Emotional Life”) as articulated in his seminal 1913-1916 work, Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values.

Read more about Stratification Of Emotional Life (Scheler):  Overview, Scheler's Analysis of The Strata of Emotive Life, The Connection Between Emotive Life and Value Modalities, Philosophy Vs. Psychology: A Relation of Synergy, See Also, References

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