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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.21464/fi37302

Phenomenology as Transcendental Philosophy. The Question of the Immediacy of Experience in Schmitz and Husserl

Željko Radinković ; Institut za filozofiju i društvenu teoriju, Kraljice Natalije 45, RS–11000 Beograd


Full text: croatian pdf 777 Kb

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Full text: english pdf 777 Kb

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Abstract

The author examines the concept of new phenomenology based on a thesis that the history of phenomenology teaches us that progressive steps in philosophy occur by means of treason rather than faithfulness, and through unique disobedient thinking rather than loyal discipleship. The novelty of Hermann Schmitz’s phenomenology is founded on the insight that the whole philosophical tradition suffers from psychologism, and that its historical duration reaches further back than the late nineteenth century. Although in Schmitz’s phenomenology we can discuss about anti­psychologism, the author points out that it presupposes the foundations of phenomenology on in natural attitude. The second part of the paper questions whether a new phenomenology could be interpreted as the teaching on authenticity which in Heidegger’s Being and Time had paid a tribute to the formalism of its transcendental thinking.

Keywords

Hermann Schmitz; Edmund Husserl; Martin Heidegger; new phenomenology; authenticity; psychologism; natural attitude

Hrčak ID:

196313

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/196313

Publication date:

23.11.2017.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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