Notes on Contributors Introduction: Why Put Edith Stein and Max Scheler into Dialogue? Timothy A. Burns, Travis Lacy, and Eric J. Mohr Part I: Human Personhood and Individuality 1. Revisiting the Concept of the Person and Its Moral Responsibility in Max Scheler and in Edith Stein, Eugene Kelly 2. Two Tenets of Personalism: Irreducibility and Individuality in Max Scheler and Edith Stein, Eric J. Mohr 3. Scheler and Stein on the Notion of Unity in the Definition of the Person, Elise Dravigny 4. Stein's Reading of Scheler's Idole der Selbsterkenntnis : Distinguishing Empathy and Psychic Contagion, Mette Lebech 5.
The Role of Spirit in Shaping Personhood: Insights from Scheler and Stein, Susan Gottlöber Part II: Human Embodiment and Sociality 6. Relational Ontologies: Ethics and Embodiment in the Thought of Max Scheler and Edith Stein, Michael Andrews 7. Stein and Scheler on the Experience of Essences, Daniel Neuman 8. Stein, Scheler, and the Contemporary Debate on Body Ownership, Martina Properzi 9. On Some Gnostic Motifs in Max Scheler's Philosophical Anthropology--Rethinking the Future of Personalism with Edith Stein, William Tullius 10. The Concept of Bildung in Stein and Scheler: Its Relevance and Contribution to the Flourishing of the Human Person, Valentina Gaudiano 11. Max Scheler and Edith Stein's Phenomenology of the State, Olivier Agard Part III: Philosophy of Religion and Theological Indebtedness 12. What is the 'Philosophical Worldview' According to Scheler? From Stein's Comments on Scheler, Maximillian Lu 13.
Spirit versus Matter or Life?: Edith Stein's Finite and Eternal Being in Dialogue with Max Scheler's The Human Place in the Cosmos , Sarah Borden Sharkey 14. A Phenomenology of Spiritual Life? Tareq Ayoub 15. Les Raisons du Coeur : The Intelligence of Love in Edith Stein and Max Scheler, Travis Lacy 16. 'That They Maybe All Be One': Edith Stein, Max Scheler, and a Phenomenology of the Eucharist, Timothy A. Burns Part IV: Translation 17. The Meaning of Phenomenology as Worldview ( Die weltanschauliche Bedeutung der Phänomenologie ), Edith Stein, translated by Walter Redmond.