
(2017) AUC Interpretationes 7 (2).
Lebenswelt und Intentionalität der Urteilsbildung
Zur Revision eines phänomenologischen Grundkonzepts
Jagna Brudzińska
pp. 169-180
This paper approaches the notion of lifeworld as the original ground for intentional judgments. Husserl’s phenomenology begins with a purely theoretical understanding of intentionality and judgment, but his position later evolves into a broader account of the practical and genetic, preverbal, and pre-reflective aspects of intentionality. This broadening of the conception of intentionality corresponds with the discovery of the complex, intertwined, and multi-layered dimension of lifeworld. An important step in the development of a more encompassing theory of lifeworld is provided by Husserl’s reflection on Avenarius’ notion of “natural world” already in 1910/11. However, Husserl reaches the full accomplishment of the theory of lifeworld and of the formation of judgment only by designing the phenomenological genetic method, thereby developing a new understanding of transcendental subjectivity and introducing the notion of type as a concrete generality arising from the lifeworld.
Publication details
DOI: 10.14712/24646504.2019.11
Full citation:
Brudzińska, J. (2017). Lebenswelt und Intentionalität der Urteilsbildung: Zur Revision eines phänomenologischen Grundkonzepts. AUC Interpretationes 7 (2), pp. 169-180.
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