Category Archives: Phenomenology
Philosophy as Universal Science
Is Philosophy as Science Really Possible? Few continental philosophers ever took up Husserl’s notion of philosophy as a rigorous science. And even fewer analytic philosophers, since it was William James that was responsible for Husserl’s work not being published until … Continue reading
Filed under History, Logic, Phenomenology, Philosophy, Science, Uncategorized
Philosophy as Universal Science
The Appearance of a Thing is the Existence of a Thing Now the idea Husserl had in mind was that we could have a systematic philosophy that was not scholastic metaphysics or Hegelian dialectical metaphysics or anything of the kind. … Continue reading
Filed under Academia, History, Intellectual, Logic, Phenomenology, Philosophy, Uncategorized
Philosophy as Universal Science
Husserl’s Transcendental Philosophical Science: Rejecting the Metaphysics of Modern Philosophy From Descartes to Hegel, systematic philosophy was primarily an epistemological project determined to unify knowledge upon a theoretical foundation of first principles (empirical, rational, or critical) with the end purpose … Continue reading
Filed under History, Logic, Phenomenology, Philosophy, Science, Uncategorized