Abstract
Shpet’s interpretation of Husserl’s phenomenology has caused puzzlement because of the lack of clarity with which he treats the transcendental turn in Appearance and Sense (1914). I suggest that we find a more comprehensive discussion on the topic in Shpet’s 1917 article, “Wisdom or Reason?” There, Shpet reacts to Husserl’s treatment of a cluster of problems related to the latter’s transition to transcendental idealism. I read “Wisdom or Reason?” not only in relation to Husserl’s Logos article of 1911, but also to his 1907 lecture series “The Idea of Phenomenology.” My analysis of Shpet’s phenomenology reveals that he followed through with the transcendental turn, although his philosophy developed in a direction different from Husserl’s transcendental idealism. Shpet postulates a collective consciousness, in which meaning-constitution takes place, and discovers the “word” as the foundation for any cognition. Shpet’s phenomenology remains ontological, as he considers language or culture as the “form of being” in which human beings live. In “Wisdom or Reason?,” Shpet argues that we can have direct knowledge of this meaningful reality: being is not “represented” but “presented” in a word. A certain compatibility thus exists between Shpet’s phenomenology of cultural reality and Husserl’s search for the absolute validity of knowledge.
Highlights
The aim of this article is to introduce a new way of approaching Gustav Shpet’s interpretation of Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology
Shpet draws his conclusions at the end of the book, i.e., of how the phenomenologist uncovers the entelechy of an object, the meaningfulness of the object within “social reality” (Nemeth 2019b, p. 268)
In the endless variation of appearances of being, Shpet asks, what is real and permanent? to Husserl’s epoché, Shpet emphasises the adoption of a critical attitude regarding our relationship towards the world: “We look with different eyes on what there is” (Shpet 2019, p. 230)
Summary
The aim of this article is to introduce a new way of approaching Gustav Shpet’s interpretation of Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology. Shpet has interpreted the concept of essentiality not as the objectively valid and reduced self-given, which the phenomenologist looks for “in” his cognition, but as an essentiality that he finds by “probing deeper” into reality From this point onwards, whilst Husserl analyses the structures of the reduced, phenomenological gaze, Shpet’s philosophical interest is directed towards the inward structures of reality. In Shpet’s theory, the question of sense or meaning (smysl) comes to replace the Husserlian question of constitution, and it is precisely meaning that is the content of the “filled” eidetic form.16 In this new kind of seeing of essences—as a meaningful part of a whole— Shpet finds the true opposite of the natural attitude: the properly philosophical outlook. In Husserl’s thought, the ontological “question of being” is formulated as an “as-what” question (Overgaard 2004, p. 206)
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