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Philosophical Scientists and Scientific Philosophers

Kant and Husserl on the Philosophical Foundations of the Natural Sciences
  • Dale Allen Hobbs
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Abstract

This chapter explores the varying conceptions of science as such put forth by Kant and Husserl, particularly with respect to the essential connections that each posit between the natural sciences and the field of transcendental philosophy. Although both philosophers follow a similar path in spelling out a strict set of conditions for scientificity, this chapter largely sets out to investigate the ways in which their views on the subject differ. In particular, I discuss certain limitations on Kant’s view of science that do not recur on Husserl’s model; one major purpose of the chapter is thus to defend Husserl’s views as a more developed account of the relationship between science and transcendental philosophy than are those of his philosophical forebear.

Abstract

This chapter explores the varying conceptions of science as such put forth by Kant and Husserl, particularly with respect to the essential connections that each posit between the natural sciences and the field of transcendental philosophy. Although both philosophers follow a similar path in spelling out a strict set of conditions for scientificity, this chapter largely sets out to investigate the ways in which their views on the subject differ. In particular, I discuss certain limitations on Kant’s view of science that do not recur on Husserl’s model; one major purpose of the chapter is thus to defend Husserl’s views as a more developed account of the relationship between science and transcendental philosophy than are those of his philosophical forebear.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Table of Contents v
  3. Husserl, Kant, and Transcendental Phenomenology 1
  4. Section I: The Transcendantal and the A priori
  5. The Meaning of the Transcendental in the Philosophies of Kant and Husserl 23
  6. The Ethics of the Transcendental 41
  7. The Phenomenological a priori as Husserlian Solution to the Problem of Kant’s “Transcendental Psychologism” 57
  8. On the Naturalization of the Transcendental 83
  9. Kant, Husserl, and the Aim of a “Transcendental Anthropology” 101
  10. Section II: The Ego and the Sphere of Otherness
  11. Transcendental Apperception and Temporalization 127
  12. “The Ego beside Itself” 143
  13. Kant and Husserl on Overcoming Skeptical Idealism through Transcendental Idealism 163
  14. “Pure Ego and Nothing More” 189
  15. Towards a Phenomenological Metaphysics 213
  16. The Transcendental Grounding of the Experience of the Other (Fremderfahrung) in Husserl’s Phenomenology 235
  17. Section III: Aesthetic, Logic, Science, Ethics
  18. Aesthetic, Intuition, Experience 259
  19. Synthesis and Identity 279
  20. Questions of Genesis as Questions of Validity 303
  21. Philosophical Scientists and Scientific Philosophers 333
  22. A Phenomenological Critique of Kantian Ethics 359
  23. Section IV: Transcendental Philosophy in Debate
  24. Is There a “Copernican” or an “Anti-Copernican” Revolution in Phenomenology? 391
  25. Back to Fichte? 411
  26. “An Explosive Thought:” Kant, Fink, and the Cosmic Concept of the World 439
  27. Eugen Fink’s Transcendental Phenomenology of the World 455
  28. Amphibian Dreams 479
  29. Husserlian Phenomenology in the Light of Microphenomenology 505
  30. Index of Persons 523
  31. Subject Index 527
Heruntergeladen am 15.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110564280-016/html
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