Where Do Centaurs Come From? A Non-standard Reading of Husserl’s Doctrine of Phantasia

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Abstract

Where do centaurs come from? In his 1904-05 lectures, Husserl sketches an an-swer to this question that draws on his original doctrine of phantasy. Centaurs, he argues, result from the phenomenization of phantasy appearances, namely, from their condensation into the image of a perceptual object that may have never been in the real world. In his late masterwork, Phénoménologie en esquisses – Nouvelles fondations (2000), Marc Richir builds on this response to develop a non-standard re-foundation of the phenomenological concepts of epoché and intentionality and of the very project of genetic phenomenology. In this article, I measure Richir’s reading of Husserl’s early doctrine of phantasy against the latter’s subsequent attempts to inte-grate it within the developments of his phenomenology of phantasy and against influ-ential scholarship (Rudolf Bernet and others) that builds on these developments.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)185-207
Number of pages23
JournalDiscipline Filosofiche
Volume33
Issue number2
StatePublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Epoché
  • Husserl
  • Imagination
  • Phantasy
  • Richir

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