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  1. Maurice Alexander Natanson (November 26, 1924 – August 16, 1996) was an American philosopher "who helped introduce the work of Jean-Paul Sartre and Edmund Husserl in the United States". He was a student of Alfred Schutz at the New School for Social Research and helped popularize Schutz' work from the 1960s onward.

  2. According to Maurice Natanson, "The radicality of the phenomenological method is both continuous and discontinuous with philosophy's general effort to subject experience to fundamental, critical scrutiny: to take nothing for granted and to show the warranty for what we claim to know."

  3. 20. Aug. 1996 · Maurice Natanson, a philosopher who helped introduce the work of Jean-Paul Sartre and Edmund Husserl in the United States, died on Friday at his home in Santa Cruz, Calif. He was 71.

  4. 31. Okt. 2009 · Policies and ethics. Natanson devoted most of his aesthetic writings to linking phenomenology with literature. He distinguishes the philosophy of literature from philosophy in literature. The former explores literature’s categories in relationship to the being of the artwork, and...

    • Michael D. Barber
    • 2009
  5. MAURICE ALEXANDER NATANSON 1924-1996 A man of great wit, a scholar, a philosopher, a teacher, a friend. Maurice Alexander Natanson, born November 1924 and died August 16, 1996, was all these things and many more. He is a man to whom I referred elsewhere as a philosopher who always remembered what it meant to be a human being. He

  6. Maurice Alexander Natanson was an American philosopher "who helped introduce the work of Jean-Paul Sartre and Edmund Husserl in the United States". He was a student of Alfred Schutz at the New School for Social Research and helped popularize Schutz' work from the 1960s onward.

  7. This volume contains sOOeen essays written by his students and colleagues in honor of Maurice Natanson. The essays explore some of the diverse themes Professor Natanson has pursued through forty years of teaching and philosophizing in the tradition of existential phenomenology.