Desiring to Know through Intuition |
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Authors: | Rudolf Bernet |
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Institution: | (1) Husserl Archives, Leuven |
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Abstract: | The major part of this paper is devoted to the task of showing that Husserl's account of knowledge and truth in terms of a
synthesis of fulfilment falls prey neither to a form of “metaphysics of presence” nor to a “myth of interiority” or mentalism.
Husserl's presentation of the desire to know, his awareness of irreducible forms of absence at the heart of the intuitive
presence of the object of knowledge and his formulation of general rules concerning the possible accomplishment of a synthesis
of fulfilment are therefore carefully examined. Special attention is also given to the fact that the determination of knowledge
and truth provided by the Sixth Logical Investigation rests on an account of an original interweaving between the thing, consciousness, and language. Unlike in Husserl's earlier
and later works, no attempt is thereby made to subordinate any of these three elements involved in all knowledge to one of
the others.
This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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Keywords: | |
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