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Vol. XVIII

Year: 2018

Publication Date: December 31, 2018

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Editorial

Introduction: Notes on a troubled reception history

Authors: Ferencz-Flatz, Christian; Staiti, Andrea

Abstract: [No abstract available]

Pages: 11-30

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Articles

On some motives for Husserl's genetic turn in his research on a foundation of the Geisteswissenschaften

Authors: Lohmar, Dieter

Abstract: My contribution tries to outline some of the motives that lead Husserl to genetic phenomenology. The starting point are the analyses he wrote to include in Ideas I and Ideas II, which are dedicated to the founding of human sciences during the period 1910–1916. Here we find an intertwinement of investigations concerned with an understanding of others (on lowest and higher levels) and their contribution to the constitution of objectivity, and new research of the genesis of the way in which individual experience shapes our access to the world. My main interest is to point out systematic connections between these two directions of research which are general characteristics of genetic phenomenology.

Keywords: Geisteswissenschaften; Genetic phenomenology; Intersubjectivity; Lived body; Understanding

Pages: 31-48

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The distribution and propagation of affection in perception according to Husserl; [Die Verteilung und Fortpflanzung der Affektion in der Wahrnehmung nach Husserl]

Authors: Wang, Honghe

Abstract: Affection in perception does not exhaust itself in a single subjective act of turning-towards (Zuwendung) an object. Husserl's analyses of the propagation of affection in perception (in Hua XI), which have not been systematically or thoroughly thematized up until now, offer a much more complex picture of affection, which this article brings to the fore. The affective power distributes itself irregularly in perception. The differentiation of perceptual field into foreground and background (first section) prepares the field for the investigation of the distribution of affections (second section). This investigation leads from lower to higher levels of constitution, from simple to complex relations, and from sensations of the lived body to egological factors. In the third section, three directions of propagation of affection and, collectively, six modes of affective awakening are thoroughly analyzed. I end with a discussion of a recent critique of Husserl's "abstract" approach to affection, which seeks to offer an insight into how a complete theory of affection would look like.

Keywords: Affection; Distribution; Perception; Propagation; Retention

Pages: 71-90

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Roman Ingarden: Genetic phenomenology and realistic ontology; [Roman Ingarden: Phénoménologie génétique et ontologie réaliste]

Authors: Malherbe, Olivier

Abstract: Roman Ingarden, one of Husserl's most gifted students, devoted several thousand pages to the development of an ontological, epistemological, aesthetical and even anthropological framework that would allow him to firmly reject the so-called "idealistic turn" of his master Husserl. This paper aims at reconstructing an often overlooked side of his philosophy: his theory of consciousness and his analysis of the constitutive process involved in sense perception. After emphasizing the distinctive character of Ingarden's ontological frame and its impact on understanding concepts as fundamental as consciousness or intentionality, this paper tries to sketch Ingarden's answers to several genetic questions raised by Husserl: the relation between time and consciousness, the nature of the ultimate sense data and the question of motivation.

Keywords: Gestalt; Perception; Roman Ingarden; Static and genetic phenomenology; Time

Pages: 153-181

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Husserl and Heidegger on practical and social intentionality: From intentional winding to self-sufficiency of life; [Husserl et Heidegger sur l'intentionnalité pratique et sociale: De l'enroulement intentionnel à l'auto-suffisance de la vie]

Authors: Slama, Paul

Abstract: This paper examines how practical intentionality is described by Husserl and Heidegger respectively, and looks at the phenomenological and sociological issues of these descriptions. In Husserl, the phenomenological reduction reveals that the practices of the world involve two intentionalities which wrap one inside the other. The foundation of this dynamic is a theoretical intentionality: there are always reasons which make it possible to understand why such and such an object is surrounded by such and such a value. In the early Heidegger's work, life is not expressed by means of judgments, and it coils around itself, perpetuating itself in the ordinary practices of the world. We show that this phenomenological immanentism is put in question by Heidegger himself, and in particular in connection to the issue of the social source of intentionality. We consider the question of the compatibility between immanentism and normativity, which involve a dialectic that sheds new light on the phenomenological project.

Keywords: Heidegger; Husserl; Intentionality; Metaphysics; Phenomenology; Social intentionality

Pages: 231-254

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Endo-ontology and the later Merleau-Ponty's thoughts on space-time

Authors: Dalissier, Michel

Abstract: In this paper, I consider the idea of space-time in its philosophical specificity. Such an approach must satisfy three main conditions. First, the inquiry must meditate on the link epitomized by the hyphen in the expression "space-time". Second, it must not reduce either space to time or time to space, but must instead explore the significance of their in-between-ness and of their interweaving reality. Third, the inquiry must rid itself of any priority of space over time or of time over space that would take place in the mediation of space-time. I explore whether there is a metaphysical approach that might be able to articulate the organic link of space-time epitomized by the hyphen in order to grasp the philosophical meaning of its irreducible, deep, and fleshly thickness. I argue that Merleau-Ponty might usher in decisive clues and some insightful tools for building such a theory. I accordingly begin by discussing his later topic of an endo-ontology, linking together concepts such as endospace and endo-time. Starting from there, I examine what he finally envisions as the chiasm and nexus of space-time.

Keywords: Chiasm; Merleau-Ponty; Ontology; Phenomenology; Space-time

Pages: 303-328

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The "inverted world". Discussion-agreement of spatial-theoretical dimensions of escape; [Die „verkehrte Welt". Er-örterung raumtheoretischer Dimensionen der Flucht]

Authors: Tidona, Giovanni

Abstract: The discourse on escaping is primarily directed towards the who of escape. The question of what and how of escaping in its cultural-anthropological significance is usually neglected. The present paper claims to overcome this inadequacy by exploring escape eo ipso and as a spatial-theoretical phenomenon. For this purpose, it is necessary to rethink escape as a triple articulated phenomenological topology based on three vectors: escape as a start, escape as a transition and escape as a destination/refuge. The escape-vectors play the role of symbolic and basic structures which are connected with linguistic and cognitive paradigms. Among the basic figures of escaping, this paper examines escape as a separation, as a non-place and as a fugue; these correspond in turn to the environmental metaphors, first, of the earth as exile, secondly, of the sea and the desert, and finally of the earth as asylum. The multilayered topology of escaping is reconstructed in the interdisciplinary field of spatial theory, of etymology, literature and political philosophy. By examining its spatial-philosophical characteristics, escape emerges as a dynamic phenomenon that can reshape essential concepts and inverse traditional categories of politics. For that reason, escaping determines a philosophically "inverted world" and consequently constitutes an essential source for the future development of cultural-political systems.

Keywords: Cultural-topological vectors; Escaping; Ground-categories of politics; Interdisciplinary method; Spatial theory; Topological concepts of earth

Pages: 329-344

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The "self" as "alibi of truth" in the works of Jacques Lacan. On the relationship between cogito and desire in psychoanalysis; [Das „Ich" als „Alibi der Wahrheit" bei Jacques Lacan. Zum Verhältnis von Cogito und Begehren in der Psychoanalyse]

Authors: KĂĽhn, Rolf

Abstract: In Lacan's perspective, the cogito is unable to account for the separation between desire and language for the individual. The fundamental difference pertaining to the signifier (signifiant) makes it impossible for the enunciation (sum) to ever coincide with what is enunciated (sense). Therefore no final knowledge of self, being and reality (réel) is possible within the framework of the imaginary-symbolic life-world. This analysis, which is decisive for the therapeutic process, is then confronted with a radical-phenomenological critique that questions Lacan's presuppositions about alterity from the perspective of a primal and transcendental life (Lebendigkeit), a confrontation that ought to bear fruit for the dialog between psychoanalysis and phenomenology.

Keywords: Cogito; Desire; Ego; Significance; Truth

Pages: 345-366

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Reviews

Interest and pregivenness in Husserl's genealogy of logic

Authors: Larsen, Tarjei Mandt

Abstract: The problem of accounting for the cognitively relevant relation between experience and thought is among the defining problems of modern philosophy. I suggest that addressing this problem provides an important motive for the "genealogy of logic" that Husserl outlines in his posthumously published Experience and Judgment. Arguing that the notions of "interest" and "pregivenness" are crucial to this approach, I seek to assess it through a detailed analysis of the use to which these notions are put in its most decisive part, the account of the origin of "simple predication". I conclude that there is reason to think that the notions cannot play the roles that Husserl assigns to them, and hence that his approach fails.

Keywords: Cognitive interest; Genealogy of logic; Husserl; Predication; Pregivenness

Pages: 49-70

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Motivational analysis in Husserl's genetic phenomenology

Authors: Pugliese, Alice

Abstract: The paper discusses motivation as the inner lawfulness of consciousness and a central methodological principle of genetic phenomenology, highlighting the problem of its ambiguous status oscillating between a historical-empirical and a transcendental account of consciousness. The focus on motivation allows for the practical character of intentionality to emerge, thus presenting genetic phenomenology as a more comprehensive approach to subjective life which takes into account its constitutive indeterminacy.

Keywords: Association; Constitution; Genetic phenomenology; Motivation; Practical intentionality

Pages: 91-108

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Phenomenological reflections on instincts

Authors: Laasik, Kristjan

Abstract: The familiar Husserlian conception of fulfillment involves a contrast between the same content as being represented emptily and then (more) fully, and also the idea that the empty givenness is rightly conceived in terms of anticipations of fullness. Since perceptual experiences provide a paradigmatic case of such fulfillment, I will call it "P-fulfillment." Additionally, there is also the fulfillment of our wants, wishes, and desires. Taking wants as the paradigmatic case, I will call it "W-fulfillment." In this paper, I consider the applicability of these conceptions of fulfillment to Husserl's views of instincts, and conclude that the fulfillment of instincts is best understood not as P-fulfillment or W-fulfillment, but as sui generis, "I-fulfillment," which is distinguished by its peculiarly retrospective nature, and by the fact that when it reveals something, it can also give rise to determinacy where previously there was none.

Keywords: Edmund Husserl; Fulfillment; Genetic phenomenology; Instincts; Perception

Pages: 109-128

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Husserl's phenomenology of biological generativity; [Husserls Phänomenologie biologischer Generativität]

Authors: Gaitsch, Peter

Abstract: The present article intends to show that genetic phenomenology, as conceived by Edmund Husserl, implies an essential biological dimension. In his later research manuscripts, from the 1920s and 1930s, Husserl not only reflects on the conceivability of forms of intropathy (EinfĂĽhlung) regarding animal and plant bodies, based on dismantling reduction (Abbaureduktion), but also on the embeddedness of the human monad in ontogenetic and phylogenetic generative becoming. On that basis, the article aims to locate the place of bio-generative phenomena within the field of genetic analysis in the theories of monadic gradualism and of somatic anomalism. However, by taking into consideration that new attempts to approach biological generativity from a Husserlian perspective (A. Steinbock, R. Affifi) are only partly successful, the article ends with a delimitation of certain elements that require further elaboration, namely the investigation into the biological implications of monadology, the determination of forms of corporeal anomality, and the vindication of the notion of essential limit-phenomena.

Keywords: Biology; Edmund Husserl; Genesis; Monadology; Somatology

Pages: 129-152

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Language and tradition in Merleau-Ponty's reading of Husserl and Saussure

Authors: Andén, Lovisa

Abstract: In this paper, I examine how Merleau-Ponty develops Husserl's genetic phenomenology through an elaboration of language, which is largely influenced by Saussure's linguistics. Specifically, my focus will be on the unpublished notes to the course Sur le problème de la parole (On the Problem of Speech). I show how Merleau-Ponty recasts Husserl's notion of the historicity of truth by means of an inquiry into the relation between truth and its linguistic expression. The account that Merleau-Ponty offers differs from Husserl's in two important respects. Firstly, whereas Husserl describes a regressive inquiry of truth, Merleau-Ponty describes a regressive movement of truth, where every acquired truth seizes the tradition that precedes it. Secondly, this new notion of truth, and its dependency on its proper expression, opens up a new understanding of literature.

Keywords: Genetic phenomenology; Husserl; Language; Merleau-Ponty; Saussure

Pages: 183-205

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Responsibility in God's reason. On the importance of genetic phenomenology in ethical and religious-philosophical perspective; [Verantwortung in Gottes Grund. Zur Bedeutung der genetischen Phänomenologie in ethischer und religionsphilosophischer Perspektive]

Authors: Mintken, Tammo E.

Abstract: Many genetic approaches in philosophy, psychology or sociology lead to a partially or fully deterministic understanding of the self and its position-taking. In this article, I argue that Husserl's view of genesis differs broadly from such deterministic conceptions, as he investigates the genesis as the awakening of consciousness as consciousness or spirit as spirit. Husserl claims that the passive foundation of conscious life is the topsoil of activity and rational position-taking. But still the genetic process of the awakening of the ego, far from being an automatism, demands a primary responsibility to proceed with the awakening itself. I discuss the issue of the responsibility of wakefulness in three interconnected ways. Drawing on Edith Stein, I first develop some theological implications to demonstrate how the paradox of responsibility points toward its divine ratio, because the unfounded givenness of responsibility links the awakening person to a phenomenological understanding of theosis: the more a person cultivates her responsibility the more she resembles the divine actus purus. In a second step, I show how the ethical implications of the responsibility of awakening connect it with the truth of will. The manifold obstacles that tend to undermine ethical love reveal a new level of both responsible position-taking and practical faith in the divine entelechy. Finally, the theological and ethical results motivate a social renewal, in which responsibility embraces the Other and longs for the communitization of the truth of wills.

Keywords: Active position-taking; Community; Ethical love; God; Responsibility; Theosis; Truth of will

Pages: 207-228

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Destruction and formal indication. To illustrate the methodological basis of the young Heidegger using the example of the provisions of history and philosophy; [Destruktion und formale Anzeige. Zur Erläuterung der methodischen Grundlage des frühen Heidegger am Beispiel der Bestimmungen von Geschichte und Philosophie]

Authors: Wang, Hongjian

Abstract: From the hermeneutics of facticity to phenomenological destruction, Heidegger's constant effort has been to achieve a non-metaphysical, pre-theoretical methodology of philosophy. His ideas finally lead to the development of the method of formal indication. In this essay, I will consider first the methodological function of historical things, in order to illustrate the method of destruction. Then, I will explain the definition of philosophy from the point of view of formal indication, thereby showing how different this method is from traditional philosophical methods. Finally, I will analyse the importance of this transformation of methodology, in order to reveal in which sense a concrete universality is possible and how it contributes to the foundation of the ontology of life.

Keywords: Concretisation; Destruction; Formal indication; History; Philosophy

Pages: 255-275

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The world as a pre-individual field. Jacques Garelli, critic of Heidegger; [Le monde comme champ pré-individuel. Jacques Garelli, critique de Heidegger]

Authors: Stanciu, Ovidiu

Abstract: The purpose of this enquiry is to lay out the core features of Garelli's conception of the world as a "pre-individual field," as they emerge from his confrontation with Heidegger's thought. In the first part, I am exploring Garelli's interpretation of the "poetical expression" and the consequences he draws from it with regard to the process of "worlding" (Verweltlichung). Then, I am restating his criticism with regard to the concept of the world Heidegger developed within the framework of "fundamental ontology" and show why, on Garelli's account, an understanding of the world as an "existential structure of Dasein" fails to grasp its proper meaning. In the final part, I expose Garelli's objections to Heidegger's later understanding of the world as "Fourfold" (Geviert) and underline the dependency of this conception on a set of assumptions which perpetuate the theoretical privilege of individual being.

Keywords: Fourfold; Garelli; Heidegger; Individuation; World

Pages: 277-302

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