Husserl produced a brand new approach to
philosophy that would influence such great thinkers as Heidegger and Sartre.
Born in 1858 in
Prossnitz (now Prostejov, Czech Republic) into an Austrian Jewish family,
Edmund Husserl converted to Roman Catholicism in 1887 at 29 years old. In his
final years, due to his Jewish roots, he was banned by the Nazis from academic
life. He was educated in Leipzig, Berlin and Vienna, and taught at the
Universities of Halle, Gottingen and Freiberg.
Husserl's
Revolutionary Approach to Philosophy
Husserl agreed in
principle with Descartes that the one thing of which we can be certain is
conscious awareness. While this was his starting point, he had a fresh approach
to philosophy - simply, he claimed that everything is a "phenomenon"
and he justified this by disregarding subject versus object and consciousness
versus the world.
Instead of
favouring the subject/object, says Husserl, we should focus on the phenomenal
qualities of objects as they appear to consciousness.
Jonathan Culler in
Literary Theory explains: "We can suspend questions about the
ultimate reality of knowability of the world and describe the world as it is
given to consciousness."
From this, it appears that a work of literature
is not necessarily objective, or an actuality.
Husserl wrote: "The whole
world, when one is in the phenomenological attitude, is not accepted as actuality
but only as actuality-phenomenon. I exist, and all that is not-I
is mere phenomenon dissolving into phenomenal connections."
It follows for
example, that a work of literature is not objective, but is the experience of
the reader. Readers may do the following:
- Analyse by making connections to produce meaning.
- Fill in any gaps.
- Conjecture and then have their expectations rejected or confirmed.
In other words,
"things" are appearances rather than "things in
themselves." Whether or not they actually exist should be put aside, and
Husserl has a special word for this putting aside - "bracketing."
Thus, we should be focusing on pure experience whose premise is that reality
consists of objects and events as perceived in human consciousness, without
existing independently of it. This Husserl describes as "transcendental
idealism"
Husserl's
Critics Challenge his Theory
Husserl's critics
accused the philosopher of producing a paradox. Jeremy Harwood, in Philosophy:
100 Great Thinkers, describes their objection as follows: "How
could he possibly reconcile his claim that consciousness constitutes the
objects to which it is directed with the fact that the external world has a
reality of its own?"
Apparently,
Husserl did not respond to this question. However, he became a major influence
on Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre and other philosophers adopted some of his
principles. He died in 1938.
Sources:
- Culler, Jonathan, Literary Theory, Oxford University Press, 1997.
- Harwood, Jeremy, Philosophy: 100 Great Thinkers, Quercus, 2010.
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