This book covers Husserl’s stance on the philosopher and the history of philosophy, whether or not such a history is part of the philosophical attitude itself, and if so, how Husserl’s phenomenology might weigh in on such matters. Firstly, this text spells out some of the manifold ways in which the history of philosophy works its way in Husserl’s phenomenology, showing how concepts, methods and problems drawn from various Ancient and Modern philosophical traditions (Platonism, Aristotelianism, Sophistry, Stoicism, Scholasticism, Modern Rationalism) are transformed and embedded within transcendental phenomenology itself. Secondly, it shows how a better understanding of the distinctive patterns by means of which Husserl’s phenomenology confronts the history of philosophy could be extremely significant for historians of philosophy who are interested in learning something entirely new about the unexplored horizons of such concepts, methods and problems. Finally, based on such twofold historical and philosophical approach and thanks to a substantial reinterpretation of some key phenomenological concepts such as “multiplicity”, “constitution”, “attitude” and “variation”, this book provides a novel and original reading of Husserl’s overall philosophical project in its full meaning and scope. By doing so, this volume appeals to both students and researchers and critically engages in mainstream interpretations of phenomenology, suggesting a unique take on the idea of transcendental phenomenology as a whole.
Cuprins
Introduction.- 1. The invention of infinity? On some provisional questions.- Part I: Openings.- 2. Multiplicity, manifolds and varieties of constitution. A manifesto.- 3. The reach of attitudes.- Part II: Maps.- 4. Individuum and region of being. On the unifying principle of a “headless” ontology.- 5. Mapping ontology and its boundaries.- Part III: Worlds and Unworlds.- 6. “Until the end of the world”. On eidetic variation and absolute being of consciousness.- 7. Within and beyond productive imagination. A historical-critical inquiry into phenomenology.- Part IV: Paths.- 8. The vicissitudes of the improper.- 9. Back to the meanings themselves (and away from the Noema). On phenomenology and the Stoic doctrine of the lekton.- Part V: Infinity.- 10. Plato’s light and Gorgias’s shadow. On the manifold “beginnings” of philosophy.- 11. The Infinite Academy. On how to be a Platonist with some (Aristotelian?) help.- Conclusion.- 12. The invenvion of infinity. On a tentative answer.
Despre autor
Claudio Majolino (Ph D University of Rome “La Sapienza”, 2002). After teaching at University of Paris “La Sorbonne” (2003-2004), he is Associate Professor of philosophy at University of Lille (France) (2005—), full researcher at the UMR-CNRS research unit “Savoirs, Textes, Langage” (France) (2005—) and permanent faculty member of the “Summer School of Phenomenology” at University of Ca’ Foscari, Venice (Italy) (2013—). He has been visiting professor in many universities world-wide (University of Ouagadougou, 2007; Seattle University, 2008-2010; Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2017). He is specialized in the philosophy of language, phenomenology, metaphysics and the history of philosophy.