دانلود کتاب Husserl
by David Woodruff Smith
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عنوان فارسی: هوسرل |
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جزییات کتاب
Each of the weighty nine chapters takes on an particular category or subject and integrates it with previous and future chapters. The author argues that the multifarious and interdependent elements of Husserl's philosophy make this the only approach possible. As such, the book can seem overlong and repetitive, but this actually facilitates comprehension, particularly as ideas get presented in various contexts. Following two chapters delineating biography and systematic thinking, Logic takes center stage. Husserl's mathematical origins pervade this chapter, along with his famous critique of psychologism (the reduction of logic to psychological "states"). Here Husserl's idea of semantics and logic take on qualities similar to a correspondence theory of truth (propositions map to "states of affairs") and "transcendental logic" grounds itself in ideal (though not posited or spatio-temporal ontological entities) intentional content. "The Crisis" also appears here with the concern over the "Mathematization" of nature. Ontology then dominates chapter four, with discussions of material and formal essences, the three "regions of Being" (Nature, Consciousness and Culture), non-Platonic ideal entities, parts and wholes, moments, and Husserl's (not Kant's) "Transcendental Idealism." Next "Phenomenology I," chapter five, lays out the groundwork for Husserl's most acclaimed contribution: phenomenology or the study of consciousness from the first-person perspective or, in Husserl's words, "the science of the essence of consciousness." Consciousness is intentional, or "consciousness of something." This occurs via interactions between subject, object, content and act, constrained by a horizon of possibilities for an intended object. In concert with his conception of the "Life-World," Husserl's fundamental triad emerges: subjectivity, objectivity and intersubjectivity. We experience the world through these experiential lenses. "Phenomenology II," the book's longest chapter, digs deeper. Some of Husserl's familiar notions appear here, such as "bracketing" with his method of "transcendental phenomenology" (which shifts from the "natural attitude" to one of phenomenological reflection), "noema" (an ideal content or sense not occurring in space-time), "noesis" (the intentional part of an experience occurring in time). Here lies the true meat of the book. "Epistemology" builds on the phenomenological chapters with ideas of "intuition" and "evidence." This chapter argues that Husserl synthesized empiricist, rationalist and Kantian epistemological views, thereby dodging skepticism as phenomenology plugs us into the world (Husserl eschewed the unknowable Kantian "noumenon"). "Essential insight," or "eidedtic intuition," a controversial aspect of Husserl's thought, gets defended here against claims of Platonism and mysticism. In the end, knowledge receives its base from our everyday "Life-world." Though Husserl rarely receives mention as an ethicist, an entire chapter explores his ethical views framed by the formal principle "do the better." These views tend towards the metaethical. A final chapter outlines Husserl's legacy, exploring both "Continental" and "Analytical" descendants. His influence in the former remains solidly unquestionable. Nonetheless, Husserl's importance in the "Analytic" school remains a little nebulous. This section doesn't really illuminate his "Analytic" side convincingly, as his influence here seems more tenuous, particularly in comparison with his indubitable Continental presence. A very appropriate reiteration of Husserl's triad (subjectivity, objectivity and intersubjectivity) closes the book.
The weight and scope of this book should not intimidate as the text itself flows smoothly. Brain twisting concepts come out seeming comprehensible and accessible. Diagrams and outlines even help elucidate difficult ideas in places. Not only that, many chapters contain background history on the subject at hand. "Ontology" discusses Aristotle and Kant. Likewise, "Epistemology" provides enough history on empiricism (Locke, Berkeley, Hume) and rationalism (Descartes, Leibniz, Spinoza) to put Husserl's ideas in proper context. A glossary even provides an alphabetical reference for terminology. Beginners will learn about more than Husserl. Even those not new to philosophy but new to Husserl will glean droves of information, especially those not familiar with the "Analytic" and "Continental" divide, often kept secret in philosophy departments on both sides. Husserl potentially serves as a bridge between this chasm that still largely exists (though Heidegger has become accepted in some analytic circles, he's often presented within only within that framework). Hopefully this book will make this startlingly original, and sometimes overwhelming, thinker more accessible to all sides of the spectrum. This book nearly obliterates all accusations of Husserlian incomprehensibility as well as, arguably, other misunderstandings. Things just became easier.