
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1993
Pages: 423-439
Series: Contributions to Phenomenology
Full citation:
, "The underlying conception of science in Dilthey's", in: Japanese and Western phenomenology, Berlin, Springer, 1993


The underlying conception of science in Dilthey's
pp. 423-439
in: Philip Blosser, Eiichi Shimomissé, Lester Embree, Hiroshi Kojima (eds), Japanese and Western phenomenology, Berlin, Springer, 1993Abstract
In this essay I show that Dilthey does not merely supplement the natural sciences as he knew them with a theory of the human sciences. He also criticizes the natural sciences as part of a larger attack on Western metaphysics and the epistemological conception of science it has fostered. Both the natural and human sciences are rooted in a pre-scientific knowledge (Wissen) of life which is then transformed into mediated forms of conceptual knowledge (Erkenntnis). Whereas the natural sciences increasingly abstract from the reflexive awareness involved in Wissen, the human sciences should not. Instead, the human sciences must make what is immediately reflexive available for reflection.
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1993
Pages: 423-439
Series: Contributions to Phenomenology
Full citation:
, "The underlying conception of science in Dilthey's", in: Japanese and Western phenomenology, Berlin, Springer, 1993