
Bernhard Waldenfels
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Geb. 1934 in Essen. Studium der Philosophie, Psychologie, klassischen Philologie und Geschichte in Bonn, Innsbruck und München. Promotion 1959 in München. Staatsexamen in den Fächern Griechisch, Latein und Geschichte 1960/61. 1960-62 Studienaufenthalt in Paris. Habilitation 1967 in München. 1966-67 Unterricht in Griechisch und Latein an einem Privatgymnasium. 1968-76 Lehrtätigkeit als Universitätsdozent und außerordentlicher Professor an der Münchner Universität. Ab 1976 ordentlicher Professor für Philosophie an der Ruhr-Universität Bochum. 1999 emeritiert. 2012 Ehrenpromotionen der Universitäten Freiburg und Rostock.
in English
X2016
Primerjalna književnost 39/1
The birth of ἦθος out of πάθος
2016
Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 37/1

The ethical priority of the extra-ordinary
2016
Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 37/1

2015
in: Time, memory, institution, Athens, OH : Ohio University Press
2015
in: Exemplarity and singularity, London-New York : Routledge
2014
in: The agon of interpretations, Toronto : University of Toronto Press
2013
Chinese Semiotic Studies 9
2012
in: The Oxford handbook of contemporary phenomenology, Oxford : Oxford University Press
Strangeness, hospitality, and enmity
2011
in: Philosophy and the return of violence, New York : Continuum
2011
Philosophical News 2
Alterity as experience, image, and place
2009
in: La globalización y sus espejismos, Quito : El Conejo
Doubled otherness in ethnopsychiatry
2009
Schutzian Research 1

2009
in: A right to inclusion and exclusion?, Oxford : Hart
Attention, awareness, and mindfulness – a dialog
2009
Studies in Gestalt Therapy 3/2
The central role of the body in Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology
2008
Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 39/1

The role of the lived-body in feeling
2008
Continental Philosophy Review 41/2

Doubled otherness in ethnopsychiatry
2007
World Culture Psychiatry Research Review 2/2-3
Politics on the borders of normality
2007
Symposium 11/1

2006
Ethical Perspectives 13
2006
in: Interrogating ethics, Pittsburgh : Duquesne University Press
2006
in: Violence, victims, justifications, Bern : Peter Lang
Levinas on the saying and the said
2005
in: Addressing Levinas, Evanston, Ill. : Northwestern University Press
Bodily experience between selfhood and otherness
2004
Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences Special issue 3/3

From intentionality to responsivity
2003
in: Phenomenology today, Pittsburgh : Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center
Levinas and the face of the other
2002
in: The Cambridge companion to Levinas, Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
Ethics in the differend of discourses
2001
Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 32/3
2000
in: Chiasms, Albany : SUNY Press
Time lag: motifs for a phenomenology of the experience of time
2000
Research in Phenomenology 30

1999
in: A companion to continental philosophy, Oxford : Blackwell
1998
in: Phenomenology and life-world, Freiburg-München : Alber
1998
in: A companion to continental philosophy, Oxford : Blackwell
1997
in: Encyclopedia of phenomenology, Dordrecht-Boston-London : Kluwer
Beyond foundationalism and functionalism
1997
in: To work at the foundations, Dordrecht : Springer

Response and responsibility in Levinas
1995
in: Ethics as first philosophy, London-New York : Routledge
1995
in: Encountering the other(s), Albany : SUNY Press
1995
Philosophy and Social Criticism 21/5-6
1994
The Southern Journal of Philosophy 32
1994
Southern Journal of Philosophy 32
Between necessity and superabundance
1991
Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 14/1

1991
in: Writing the politics of difference, Albany : SUNY Press
Limits of legitimation and the question of violence
1991
in: Justice, law and violence, Philadelphia : Temple University Press
Experience of the alien in Husserl's phenomenology
1990
Research in Phenomenology 20

1989
in: Life-world and politics, Notre Dame : University of Notre Dame Press
1988
Quarterly Journal of Ideology 12
Perception and structure in Merleau-Ponty
1980
Research in Phenomenology 10

1976
Dialectics and Humanism 3/1