KNOWING FROM EXPERIENCE: ON INDUCTION IN A BROADER SENSE AND THE INTUITION OF ESSENCES
KNOWING FROM EXPERIENCE: ON INDUCTION IN A BROADER SENSE AND THE INTUITION OF ESSENCES
Author(s): Alexandru BejinariuSubject(s): Philosophy, Phenomenology
Published by: NEW EUROPE COLLEGE - Institute for Advanced Studies
Keywords: induction; experiential science; eidetic intuition; a priori laws; evidence; intuitive grasp; variation; positing character;
Summary/Abstract: Phenomenology, in its Husserlian design, appeared as a form of descriptive psychology that aimed to overcome the boundaries of an empiric science and become a pure, eidetic discipline. In this paper, I reevaluate the relation between Husserl’s phenomenology and Brentano’s descriptive psychology or psychognosy. I argue that despite Husserl’s famous retraction of his initial characterization of phenomenology as descriptive psychology, in Brentano’s specific method of psychognosy exists a step that is not specific to any empirical science, does not imply any positing, and it is not bound to the actual world, namely: induction in a broader sense or the intuitive grasping of laws that arise from concepts.
Journal: New Europe College Stefan Odobleja Program Yearbook
- Issue Year: 2020
- Issue No: 2019+20
- Page Range: 9-34
- Page Count: 26
- Language: English