Heidegger was Husserl's student, successor, and heir apparent: he's one of the founders of phenonomenology. Marvin Farber, the leading American expert on phen., ended up a Marxist. So did my friend Richard Schmitt of Brown (author of the nice little Westview Intro to Marx and Engels), who started out a ph. Merleau-Ponty, the greatest ph., went into Marxism and most emphatically out of it again. --jks
>From: Michael Pugliese <debsian at pacbell.net>
>Reply-To: lbo-talk at lists.panix.com
>To: lbo <lbo-talk at lists.panix.com>
>Subject: Re: Something you're not likely to see from me again soon
>Date: Sun, 03 Jun 2001 10:51:05 -0700
>
> Two cites to add to Michael Pollock's re: Heideggerian marxists.
>(With the proviso I've never read, Husserl or other phenomenologists in any
>depth, except Merleau-Ponty. And what is the connection between
>phenomenology and Heidegger anyway? Wasn't a philosophy major...).
>Karel Kosik, "Dialectics of the Concrete, " trans. by Karel Kovanda.
>Works of Enzo Paci, an Italian that Paul Piccone of Telos, in the early
>70's
>wrote some about. See the collection of early Telos pieces from a canadian
>conference, "Towards a new marxism." Telos Press.
>http://www.google.com/search?q=Enzo+Paci+phenomenological+marxism
>Michael Pugliese
>
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