Introduction and First Cartesian Meditation
Document type :
Partie d'ouvrage
Title :
“Husserl on the threefold significance of Descartes’s Meditationes”
Introduction and First Cartesian Meditation
Introduction and First Cartesian Meditation
Author(s) :
Scientific editor(s) :
Alber
Book title :
Daniele De Santis (éd.). Edmund Husserl’s Cartesian Meditations: Commentary, Interpretations, DiscussionsKarl Alber, 2023
Publisher :
Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft
Publication place :
Baden-Baden
Publication date :
2023
ISBN :
978-3-495-99554-9
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Philosophie
English abstract : [en]
The present study is intended as a broad commentary on the Introduction and the 1st Cartesian Meditations (henceforth CM), and revolves around the Husserlian claim according to which Descartes’s Meditationes have a threefold ...
Show more >The present study is intended as a broad commentary on the Introduction and the 1st Cartesian Meditations (henceforth CM), and revolves around the Husserlian claim according to which Descartes’s Meditationes have a threefold significance: an everlasting significance (Husserl 1973a, p. 44/2); a significance for the present (Husserl 1973a, p. 47/5-6) a significance for phenomenology (Husserl 1973a, 43/1). After a first section, introducing a preliminary set of key concepts and distinctions (§2), I will examine the everlasting (§3), the present (§4) and the phenomenological significance of the Meditationes (§5). I will conclude with some remarks on a revealing analogy used by Husserl to illustrate Descartes’s overall relationship to philosophy (§6).Show less >
Show more >The present study is intended as a broad commentary on the Introduction and the 1st Cartesian Meditations (henceforth CM), and revolves around the Husserlian claim according to which Descartes’s Meditationes have a threefold significance: an everlasting significance (Husserl 1973a, p. 44/2); a significance for the present (Husserl 1973a, p. 47/5-6) a significance for phenomenology (Husserl 1973a, 43/1). After a first section, introducing a preliminary set of key concepts and distinctions (§2), I will examine the everlasting (§3), the present (§4) and the phenomenological significance of the Meditationes (§5). I will conclude with some remarks on a revealing analogy used by Husserl to illustrate Descartes’s overall relationship to philosophy (§6).Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Collections :
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