Abstract

This paper seeks to define the main trends, arguments and problems regarding the question of method formulated by Twardowski and his students. In this regard, the aim of the paper is twofold. First, I situate Brentano’s project of descriptive psychology within the context of disputes in the school of Twardowski concerning the method of both psychology and phenomenology, arguing that descriptive-psychological analysis was dominant in this respect. Second, the study explores the notion of eidetic phenomenology, as founded on a methodological procedure, which supposed to guarantee infallibility of its descriptions. To show this, I first reconstruct Brentano’s concept of descriptive psychology, its object, its method and aims. Second, I track the changes and reinterpretations provided by Twardowski in his view of descriptive-psychological analysis. Third, I explore Witwicki’s and Bandrowski’s—both early students of Twardowski—discussions of the descriptive approach. I try to show that the former accepted psychologism, while the latter overcame it by means of logical analysis. Fourth, I suggest that the only student of Twardowski who renounced the Brentanian method was Ingarden, who developed eidetic phenomenology. Finally, I present Blaustein’s—one of the last students of Twardowski—reappraisal of descriptive psychology and his critique of Ingarden’s method. This controversy over the method of descriptive psychology reveals how one can situate Twardowski’s legacy within early phenomenology in Poland.

Highlights

  • The main aim of this article is to explore the heritage of Franz Brentano’s (1838–1917) project of descriptive psychology in Kazimierz Twardowski’s (1866–1938) philosophical work and in his students, including Władysław Witwicki (1878–1948), Bronisław Bandrowski (1879–1914), Roman Ingarden (1893–1970) and Leopold Blaustein (1905–1942 [or 1944])

  • Betti (2017b, pp. 306–307) lists four theses that Twardowski shared with Brentano: (1) descriptive psychology is the fundamental science; (2) descriptive analysis is the method of descriptive psychology; (3) descriptive psychology is primary with respect to genetic or experimental psychology; and (4) ethics has cognitive content based on emotional experience

  • (1) Twardowski defines the object of psychology as psychic facts; (2) psychic facts are mereological objects understood as wholes that include their parts; (3) psychology is developed as a descriptive analysis of psychic wholes to determine simplest parts; (4) psychic facts are given in introspection, which is infallible and evident; yet (5) introspection is limited to subjective experience, and for this reason (6) it has to be supplemented by experimental methods; (7) the aim of psychology is to classify psychic facts by a reference to (8) inductive-deductive methods; (9) the classification differs from the Brentanian one; (10) initially psychology was regarded by Twardowski as the fundamental science, but later he adopted anti-psychologism

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Summary

Introduction

The main aim of this article is to explore the heritage of Franz Brentano’s (1838–1917) project of descriptive psychology in Kazimierz Twardowski’s (1866–1938) philosophical work and in his students, including Władysław Witwicki (1878–1948), Bronisław Bandrowski (1879–1914), Roman Ingarden (1893–1970) and Leopold Blaustein (1905–1942 [or 1944]). Given Brentano’s all-pervasive presence in philosophy, this article is an attempt to track and define Brentano’s legacy and to especially elaborate on the idea of descriptive psychology in early phenomenology. As it is well known, Husserl In the BSelf-Portrait,^ which was originally written in 1926, Twardowski (1991, 1999) expressed an intellectual debt to Brentano, especially to his method Throughout his academic career in Lvov he repeatedly redefined psychology, its object and its methodological scope.

Brentano’s idea of psychology
Twardowski between psychologism and anti-psychologism
Witwicki’s and Bandrowski’s approaches to phenomenology
Ingarden on how to overcome the Brentanian method toward phenomenology
Blaustein’s reappraisal of descriptive psychology
Conclusions
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