Husserl Reading Kant. Remarks on Reason and its Limits

Authors

  • Rosemary Rizo-Patrón Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
    Doctora en Filosofía por la Universidad Católica de Lovaina, Bélgica. Profesora Principal y Coordinadora del Doctorado en Filosofía de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Secretaria del Círculo Latinoamericano de Fenomenología (CLAFEN) y del Círculo Peruano de Fenomenología y Hermenéutica (CIphER). Miembro del Husserl Circle, de la Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, y del comité directivo del Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology. Es coeditora responsable de la revista Estudios de Filosofía del Instituto Riva-Agüero de la Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Ha editado los tres volúmenes del Acta fenomenológica latinoamericana de CLAFEN (2004, 2006 y 2009); Tolerancia: Interpretando la experiencia de la tolerancia (2007); y El pensamiento de Husserl en la reflexión filosófica contemporánea (1993), con la colaboración de eminentes fenomenólogos latinoamericanos y europeos. Autora de numerosos trabajos de filosofía fenomenológica contemporánea (continental).

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/arete.201202.006

Keywords:

transcendental philosophy, phenomenology, rationality, finitude, anthropology, teleology

Abstract

A preliminary overview of Husserl reading Kant shows that both thinkers represent two essentially different types of philosophies in their methods and reach. The judgement made by Husserl about Kant allows to state that we are facing two different privileged intuitions. Nevertheless, it also allows to state a “family resemblance”–if not in their styles and methodology– in certain ground convictions regarding philosophy and reason’s finite nature. This paper approaches, from a Husserlian perspective, the relationship between “experience and judgment” –proper to a “Transcendental Theory of Elements”– and in that between “science and philosophy” –corresponding to a “Transcendental Theory of Method”. Furthermore, it will approach the distinction between natural and transcendental-phenomenological attitudes that allow Husserl to introduce two levels of philosophical interrogation and two types of philosophical anthropologies, corresponding to the splitting of the ego – a pure constitutive ego and a constituted one. This last will lead to the genetic problem of the ego’s self-constitution from the deepest strata of passive instinctive life (unconscious and irrational) towards rational life in a teleological ascending movement that enacts the Kantian problem of reason’s finitude. Despite of the incorporation that Husserl makes of a teleology of Leibnizian type that resolves the Kantian hiatus between sensible and intelligible world, the Kant connoisseurs will recognize his tracks in the configuration of the Husserlian trascendental phenomenology.

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How to Cite

Rizo-Patrón, R. (2012). Husserl Reading Kant. Remarks on Reason and its Limits. Areté, 24(2), 351–383. https://doi.org/10.18800/arete.201202.006

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