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Publication details

Year: 2006

Pages: 141-157

Series: Human Studies

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Michael Barber, "Philosophy and reflection", Human Studies 29 (2), 2006, pp. 141-157.

Philosophy and reflection

a critique of Frank Welz's sociological and "processual" criticism of Husserl and Schutz

Michael Barber

pp. 141-157

in: Human Studies 29 (2), 2006.

Abstract

Frank Welz's Kritik der Lebenswelt undertakes a sociology of knowledge criticism of the work of Edmund Husserl and Alfred Schutz that construes them as developing absolutist, egological systems opposed to the "processual" worldview prominent since the modern rise of natural science. Welz, though, misunderstands the work of Schutz and Husserl and neglects how their focus on consciousness and eidetic features pertains to the kind of reflection that one must undertake if one would avoid succumbing to absolutism, that uncovers the presuppositions of the processual worldview itself, and that secures a domain distinctive of philosophy over against sociology. Finally, Welz's charge that Schutz favors a Neo-Kantian social scientific methodology contradictory to his phenomenology neglects the levels of Schutz's discourse and ignores how the Weberian ideal-typical approach can be subsumed within phenomenology.

Cited authors

Publication details

Year: 2006

Pages: 141-157

Series: Human Studies

Full citation:

Michael Barber, "Philosophy and reflection", Human Studies 29 (2), 2006, pp. 141-157.