Abstract
The themes discussed in the previous chapter all pertain to descriptive psychology. In this chapter I will show that Husserl attached himself to a certain tradition inaugurated by Brentano. The problematics embedded in the duality of genetic and descriptive psychology can perhaps be regarded as the driving force in the thinking of Husserl; after 1907 it finally led him to distinguish between descriptive psychology and transcendental phenomenology.
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References
PES I 17, 138 II, 68, 81.
PES I 62, 66.
PES I 102ff, 105; see also L. Gilson, Méthode et métaphysique selon Franz Brentano, 112–158; Hugo Bergmann ‘Brentano’s theory of induction,’ 281–292.
VE 84, 94, 95; L. Gilson op.cit. 149ff.
PES I 34, see also 260 note 22; Letzte Wünsche 38; Zukunft 95.
PES I 10.
PES I 65, 67, 105.
PES I 66, 67, 71.
PES I 17 note 2, 134, 138.
Id II 56, 161, 286.
PES I 87, 89, 100.
See below 384.
PES I 63. Consequently Brentano prefers to eludicate the concept by way of an example rather than by way of a definition, III.
Zukunft 153 note 40, 154 note 44; Letzte Wünsche 34. See also Spiegelberg The Phenomenological Movement, 37.
Spiegelberg, The Phenomenological Movement, 36; see also Kraus in Zukunft XIX.
USE 16, 53; WE 53; see also Kastil, Die Philosophie Franz Brentano’s, 29 and below 106f.
Spiegelberg, op.cit. 27 note 2, see also 9, 16, 17, 672.
LU II (ed. I) 18; See also K. Kuypers ‘Ursprung und Bedeutung der deskriptiven Methode in der Phänomenologie.’
Below 77.
PES I 112, see also the notes of Kraus 268; 276 note 7; Zukunft XIX.
PES I 41, 181.
PES I 179.
Spiegelberg, The Phenomenological Movement, 36.
Spiegelberg, op. cit. 38, 50.
O. Kraus, ‘Geisteswissenschaft und Psychologie,’ 500; see also PES I 260 note 22; Zukunft, XVIII, XIX and Kastil, Die Philosophie Franz Brentano’s, 29.
PES I 17 note 2; see above 21 and 49.
Archiv für systematische Philosophie 1897, 225; see also PA 70 and PSL 182, 184, 190.
PES I 151.
PA 62, see also 38f, 42, 220, 222f, 227, 289.
PSL 183.
PSL 183, 187f.
PSL 183, 187; Archiv für systematische Philosophie, 1897, 226 note 1.
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© 1978 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers bv, The Hague
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De Boer, T. (1978). Genetic and Descriptive Psychology. In: The Development of Husserl’s Thought. Phaenomenologica, vol 76. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-9691-5_2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-9691-5_2
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