
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2017
Pages: 191-209
Series: Husserl Studies
Full citation:
, "Act psychology and phenomenology", Husserl Studies 33 (3), 2017, pp. 191-209.
Abstract
Husserl famously retracted his early portrayal, in Logische Untersuchungen, of phenomenology as empirical psychology. Previous scholarship has typically understood this transcendental turn in light of the Ideen’s revised conception of the ἐποχή, and its distinction between noesa and noemata. This essay thematizes the evolution of the concept of mental acts in Husserl’s work as a way of understanding the shift. I show how the recognition of the pure ego in Ideen I and II enabled Husserl to radically alter his conception of mental acts, coming to understand them all in terms of genuine acts (doings or performances) in a way that had been essentially precluded for descriptive psychologists (Brentano, Natorp, and the early Husserl) so long as the pure ego was denied. This reading challenges a widespread assumption in the secondary literature that “mental act” is a merely technical term or misnomer.
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2017
Pages: 191-209
Series: Husserl Studies
Full citation:
, "Act psychology and phenomenology", Husserl Studies 33 (3), 2017, pp. 191-209.