12,309 research outputs found
A study about the universals in Ideas I
The problem of universals remains a philosophical theme not only in ontology but also in
epistemology. In Husserl, there are particular universals, the noematic ‘X’, the identical, and
universals stricto sensu, atemporal universal names. In this paper, I present the theme as it is
analyzed by Husserl in Ideas I. In the first section, I describe the trajectory to the universals
highlighting the parallelism between noese and noema. In the second section, I draw the
reflection of this problem on the philosophy of language which is also affected by the noeticnoematic
correspondence. In the third and last section, I show how the investigation about the
universals moves in the noematic sphere, and conclude defending the possibility of reaching
the universal strict sense departing from the noematic ‘X’
Husserl and Reinach, the idea of promise
In this paper, I discuss the possibility of reading the description of promise presented by Reinach in The Apriori Foundations of the Civil Law under the light of Husserl’s Ideas I. In order to present my argument, first, I briefly present the phenomenological method proposed by Husserl in Ideas I highlighting eidetic reduction. Second, I present the Reinachian description of social acts emphasizing the act of promising. Third, and finally, I try to demonstrate that the Reinachian description of the social act of promising is the description of a universal and necessary relation, a synthetic and a priori statement and corresponds to the idea of promise
The constitution of objectivities in consciousness in Ideas I and Ideas II
In this paper, I present the difficulty in the phenomenology of explaining the constitution of objectivities in consciousness. In the context of phenomenological reduction, constitution has to be understood as unveiling the universal and necessary essences. Recognized by Husserl in Ideas I and named as functional problems, the constitution of objectivities refers at first to individual consciousness, and then to an intersubjective one. In Ideas II, the phenomenologist explains how the constitution of nature, psyche, and spirit occurs. This process begins by assuming three premises: the ontological realism, the regularity of nature, and the transcendental idealism. In this process, the ego, apart from constituting objects (the body, the psyche, and the others), constitutes itself. The objects of material reality are constituted through aesthetic synthesis which unifies singularities and contextualizes the lived experience. The body, as a perceptive organ, perceives the exterior, and the location of the sensory stimulus is the soul. The soul is a real and transcendent object, which is linked to physical things that are constituted in a solipsistic way or intersubjectively. Empathy allows the subject to recognize the consciousness of the alter ego as capable of spontaneous movements and actions, a co-presence sharing the same horizons. Thus, through the theoretical attitude, the physical world is perceived, and through the spiritual attitude the spiritual world is perceived, a living world shared by free intelligent beings. For this, intersubjectivity fulfills a fundamental role, because only in the relationship with the other does the identity of the objects, of the other, and of the self become evident
Schelerian Fundamentals of Logotherapy
Viktor Frankl’s Logotherapy is based on Max Scheler’s theory of values and anthropology.
Frankl builds his psychological thinking based on critical concepts of Schelerian
thinking such as (i) value and goods, (ii) will and feelings, (iii) the hierarchy of values, and
(iv) the idea of person. It is with them that he develops his original theses of (i) the spiritual
motivation of human action, (ii) the search for meaning and (iii) the spiritual unconscious.
In doing so, he offered not only a psychotherapy of values, but also a new theory of positive
human motivation, not conceived as a result of deficiency or need, but as a result of the free
spirit toward objective values. The human search for meaning in life can only be successful
by living and realizing superior values, in the hierarchical sense proposed by Scheler
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