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What is Phenomenology

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Title: What is Phenomenology


1
What is Phenomenology?
  • Etymological definition phainomenon logos
    the study of that which appears (to
    consciousness as it appears), the study of
    experience as such.
  • A method of doing philosophy
  • a descriptive clarification of the things
    themselves.
  • not a set of doctrines There is no the one
    phenomenology (Heidegger).
  • For Husserl consciousness has an inherent a prior
    structure that can be systematically analyzed and
    described, thus phenomenology can be understood
    as a methodological description of the
    structures of experience.

2
What is Phenomenology?
  • A complex philosophical movement developed in the
    20th century in Continental Europe
  • Beginning with Husserl, who harbors the
    nostalgia of modern philosophy (Cf. Book 3 of
    Ideas, p. 229).
  • Phenomenology is thus broadly Kantian and
    Hegelian in spirit.
  • For Husserl, like Kant, the central question is
    What makes experience possible.

3
Why is Phenomenology?
  • Foundation for (all) knowledge.
  • A way of overcoming traditional problems of
    philosophy.
  • Need to understand the essential correlation
    between subjectivity and objectivity.
  • For Husserl, the central mystery of all
    philosophy is this How does objectivity get
    constituted in and for consciousness?
  • A corrective to naturalism, i.e., the attempt to
    explain consciousness through natural science.
  • (Note the division between the dogmatic
    standpoint, which takes facts as given, and the
    philosophical standpoint, which is concerned with
    the possibility of knowledge.)

4
Whither Phenomenology?
  • The Current Situation What is Living and What
    is Dead?
  • Dead (?) phenomenology as a rigorous
    foundational science.
  • Phenomenology denotes a new, descriptive,
    philosophical method, which, since the concluding
    years of the last century, has established (1) an
    a priori psychological discipline, able to
    provide the only secure basis on which a strong
    empirical psychology can be built, and (2) a
    universal philosophy, which can supply an organum
    for the methodical revision of all the sciences.
    (E. Hu, The Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1929)

5
What is living?
  • Living complex descriptive analysis of human
    subjectivity, which emphasizes the ineliminable
    role of csness in knowledge.
  • Is this question living or dead Are we at a
    crisis point?
  • For the mature Husserl, phenomenology was more
    than an academic matter. He thought the Western
    sciences were in crisis due to the fact that they
    had lost their sense of rootedness in human life
    experience. Man had forfeited his essential
    identity because he had become an impersonal
    object among objects, divorced from the inner or
    transcendental life of experience. (See The
    Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental
    Phenomenology, 1938)
  • From this point of view the aim of philosophy is
    to restore the meaningfulness of the lived and
    historical life-world.
  • And lets not forget phenomenology and the
    cognitive sciences.

6
Franz Brentano (1838-1917)
  • Life Works
  • Central ideas (to influence Husserl)
  • (1) Philosophy as an exact science
  • (2) Intentionality view that every mental act is
    related to some object
  • (3) Self-evidence of mental acts which could
    yield apodictic truths

7
Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint (1874)
  • Foreword
  • Experience alone is my teacher.
  • Outline of books
  • Goals the unity of psychology and the triumph
    of truth.

8
The Distinction between Mental and Physical
Phenomena
  • Aim move from confusion to clarity.
  • Examples...
  • Definition of mental phenomena
  • Either presentations or based on presentations.
  • Can we find a more unified definition?

9
  • Brentano considers a negative feature, i.e., the
    absence of extension, but this is not
    satisfactory.
  • The positive distinguishing feature he discovers
    is intentional inexistence.
  • New def of mp those phenomena which contain an
    object intentionally within themselves.
  • Additional features
  • Inner perception, real existence, unified.

10
Edmund Husserl (1859-1938)
  • Life
  • Major texts
  • Logical Investigations (1900-1901)
  • Ideas (1913)
  • Central terms
  • Pure (transcendental) Phenomenology
  • Epoché
  • Noesis and Noema
  • Life-World (Lebenswelt)

11
Husserl The perpetual beginner
  • Ideas (1913) merely introductory meditations
    Phenomenology is a beginning science (p. 149).
  • Pure Phen (1917) a science of a thoroughly
    new type and endless scope (p. 124).
  • Crisis (1936) We are absolute beginners here
    (p. 171).

12
Pure Phenomenology, 1917 lecture
  • Philosophy is possible as a rigorous science at
    all only through pure phenomenology.
  • The phenomenological reduction can be effected
    by modifying Descartes method, it is the
    method for effecting radical purification of the
    phenomenological field of csness from all
    obtrusions from Objective actualitiesputting out
    of action any believing in the actuality of it.
    (p.129)
  • For us the Objective world is as if it were
    placed in brackets. (p. 130)
  • How is pure phen genuinely possible as a science?

13
Ideas General Introduction to Pure Phenomenology
(1913)
  • What is Pure Phenomenology (PP)?
  • A new science far removed from ordinary thinking
  • A science of essential Being (eidetic science
    science of essences)
  • The phenomena of PP are non-real (irreal), which
    are discovered following the eidetic/transcendenta
    l reduction.
  • Our aim must be to convince ourselves of the
    possibility of this reduction in principle (p.
    231).

14
The Thesis of the Natural Standpoint and Its
Suspension
  • The natural standpoint is our ordinary, everyday
    outlook on life, which includes an awareness of a
    world spread out in time and space and a
    practical world of values.
  • The natural standpoint comprises
  • The world-about-me
  • The Cogito or mental world
  • The world-about-them or Intersubjective world

15
Epoché
  • Suspend all belief in the natural standpoint and
    all theoretical presuppositions of this
    standpoint
  • Put it out of action, disconnect it, bracket
    it
  • Of course, its still there, but weve changed
    our attitude towards it, which allows us to focus
    on the Phenomenological Residuum.
  • We are now within the realm of a new scientific
    domain, a new region of Being.
  • Thus the epoché can be likened to a religious
    conversation and existential transformation.

16
Intentionality
  • This is an essential structure of consciousness
    or conscious experiences.
  • Consciousness is always directed towards some
    object it is always about something. (But
    remember were not concerned with any connection
    to a real existent.)
  • being turned towards an object
  • Thus there is an essential distinction between
    Being as Consciousness or Experience and Being as
    Thing.
  • Intentional experiences are ACTS.
  • Reflexive acts have a double intentionality.

17
Understanding the Noesis and Noema (from Ideas,
1913)
  • Decisive for a legitimate grounding of phen.
  • Complicated analysis for the novice
  • All of it is hard and requires laborious
    concentration on the data of specifically
    phenomenological eidetic intuition.
  • There is no royal road into phen, and therefore
    none into philosophy. There is only one road
    presecribed by the phens own essence. (p. 149)

18
The Noesis and Noema
  • Noesis act of thinking
  • Noesis the components proper of intentive
    mental processes they are really inherent and
    the basis of sense-bestowal
  • Formerly called the intentional quality
  • Noema what is thought
  • Noema the intentional correlates and their
    components the perceived as perceived,
    remembered as remembered, etc. the sense

19
To make this clear Husserl carries out an
exemplary analysis.
  • In a garden we regard with pleasure a blooming
    apple tree.
  • Consider how a naturalist (materialist) would
    explain our perception.
  • Epoché the transcendental phenomenological
    attitude suspends the natural belief in the
    actual being of the apple tree.
  • The relation between perceiving and perceived,
    liking and liked, remains in pure immanence.
  • From this point we can describe perception in its
    noematic aspect as sth given in its essence.
  • Quote p. 137 The tree simpliciter....
  • Now consider these examples

20
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  • Eidetic law there can be no noetic moment
    without a noematic moment belonging to it.

23
Critique of image-theory and distinction between
immanental and actual objects
  • Image as meant, not a real predicate, based on an
    originary intentionality.
  • For Husserl, truth involves the agreement between
    the intended (meant) and the given (presence).
  • The actual object is parenthesized, but this
    doesnt prevent the fact that the perception is
    csness of an actuality.
  • Erroneous distinction leads to an infinite
    regress.

24
The Way Into Phen. Trans. Phi. by inquiring back
from the Pregiven Life-World
  • Crisis of European Sciences our understanding is
    deformed by the one-sided understanding of the
    scientific world we need to relate scientific
    understanding back to the structure of the
    life-world (Lebenswelt).
  • This is a very vast theme...
  • and a universal problem for philosophy!

25
  • Problem what is the relation between objective,
    scientific thinking and intuition of the
    surrounding world of life, pregiven as existing
    for all in common.
  • Science presupposes the life-world (the ultimate
    horizon of all human achievement).
  • The idea of objective truth is predetermined in
    its whole meaning by the contrast with the idea
    of the truth in pre-scientific and
    extra-scientific life. (p.165)

26
  • The objective-true world is in principle
    nonintuitable the life-world is the universe of
    what is intuitable.
  • How does the life-world ground the
    scientifically true world?
  • The answer is by no means obvious, but the first
    step istrans. phen. epoché of objective science.
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