Abstract

 When Husserl inaugurated, with the Logical Investigations, the project of a phenomenological theory of knowledge, he instituted at the same time a new history within this field whose productivity continues to this day. We would like to analyze here some moments of this history, following the thread of the intentional correlation. We will ask ourselves about the sense that this vocabulary acquires, about the problems to which it gives rise and about the resolutions that it finds. More precisely, we are interested in seeing some of the questions that open up from this first formulation, and the way in which they are linked and end up, in different ways, in a certain conception of life, of appearing and of the sensible. In order to do this, we will have recourse to three thinkers who have in common not only their belonging to the phenomenological school of thinking, but within it, a particular preoccupation with the problem of perception, corporality and life: Michel Henry, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Jan Patočka.   &nbsp

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