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From Interest to Intentionality. The Influence of Carl Stumpf on Edmund Husserl's Phenomenology of Attention.
- Source :
- Husserl Studies; Dec2024, Vol. 40 Issue 3, p287-307, 21p
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- In the vast landscape of Edmund Husserl's investigations, the theme of attention has long been neglected: the dispersal of his treatment of the topic across works from various years, the use of a diversified lexicon, and an intrinsic difficulty in identifying the attentional phenomenon itself have all contributed to the long-standing underestimation of this theme. Following a line of study that – especially after the publication of volume XXXVIII of the Husserliana (Wahrnehmung und Aufmerksamkeit) – has renewed interest in this topic, this article aims to contribute to the historical as well as theoretical reconstruction of Edmund Husserl's phenomenology of attention. In particular, we will focus on the contribution of a figure who had a crucial impact on Husserl's development and the framing of the phenomenological method itself, namely Carl Stumpf, concentrating especially on the engagement that the father of phenomenology had with him, starting from the treatment of attention through the concept of interest. This debate will be reconstructed from the examination of (1) part of the Göttingen Lectures of 1904-05, explicitly dedicated to attention; (2) a very early but theoretically significant Husserlian manuscript, "Noten zur Lehre von Aufmerksamkeit und Interesse" (1893); and (3) Stumpf's own work, particularly Tonpsychologie, where the interpretation of attention as "Lust am Bemerken" is formulated and with which Husserl engages in a rigorous critical dialogue. On the basis of this confrontation, we will highlight from an original perspective Husserl's significant debt to the psychology of the time, from which he not only borrowed certain themes and a general interest in the simplest levels of experience, but also the basic outlines of notions that would serve as the foundation for the development of some crucial concepts of transcendental phenomenology such as that of intentionality. Moreover, it is through the examination of attention that the profound continuity of Husserl's reflection becomes apparent, evidenced by the extraordinarily early emergence of crucial and typical notions of his later phase (known as "genetic phenomenology") during these formative years, even before the phenomenological method was fully developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 01679848
- Volume :
- 40
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Husserl Studies
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 180589814
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10743-024-09349-9