Pages

Sunday, September 25, 2022

Husserl's Ideas I - summary

Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy, also known as Ideas I, is Edmund Husserl's second major work after Logical Investigations. Husserl's  Ideas I presents  a philosophy whose task is to clarify the meaning that the world has for us in our daily lives. This is because the very life that the phenomenologist reflects on has an intentional character that coincides with an expanded notion of meaning that Husserl calls 'meaning' (Sinn). According to him, the world is what our experience refers to and at the same time the context in which we live. As a context the world is always something implicit. So, in order to explain the meaning of this implicitness, it is first necessary to stop supposing it as the foundation of the experience and recover it as the objective term to which it refers. This is what the transcendental reduction aims at.

 

 

Transcendental reduction and epoché in Idead I

In Ideas I is Husserl first introduces the subject of the transcendental reduction and epoché. This reduction is a method through which Husserl proposes to access transcendental subjectivity or pure consciousness through a series of steps or reductions. One of these reductions is the eidetic reduction, which consists of taking objects that are presented to consciousness as mere examples of essences that are obtained by eidetic variation similar to his notions in the Logical Investigations).

 

One on the key ideas of Ideas I is that of transcendental reduction as the suspension or bracketing of the belief in the reality of the world.  For Husserl, this reduction radically discovers the world as a world lived in, because with the disconnection of the belief in the reality of the world, the phenomenologist necessarily concentrates on the field of lived consciousness in which it appears and even acquires its character of reality. In other words, reduction leads us to awareness of our own lived relation to things. Only by Bracketing the world as a real world is it possible to pay attention to the world as it is lived by us. While the transcendental reduction opens the field of pure consciousness, the eidetic reduction allows us to capture what appears there in terms of essences and essential relationships. The attitude in which we live daily when we do not do philosophy is referred to by Husserl as natural attitude as opposed to a transcendental attitude.

 

Noesis and Noema

Husserl observes that after the transcendental reduction all intentional experience continues to have a double structure: a noetic side and a noematic side. While noesis refers to the way in which something is experienced, noema refers to what the experience points to as its object.​ In the intentional correlation between noesis and noema, experiences are interwoven in synthetic structures. In response to this, we can speak of a syntax of experiences that is analogous to that of language, but much more fundamental. Husserl called the study of this assigning of meaning Constitution

 

 

Impact of Ideas I

In later works after Ideas I Husserl will propose various ways of carrying out the various reductions that lead to transcendental subjectivity. From this work onwards it will be clear to Husserl that the task of philosophy understood in this way is to explain the origin and meaning of the world by reflecting on intentional experience. 

Husserl planned his Ideas Relating to a Pure Phenomenology and a Phenomenological Philosophy in three volumes. The only finished volume was the first, which we have referred to in this section. The second and third volumes were published posthumously.

 

 

Back to: What is Phenomenology

Back to: Things Themselves: Easy Intro to Husserl's Phenomenology