Response to Frierson’s “Kantian Feeling: Empirical Psychology, Transcendental Critique and Phenomenology”

  • Array Array Saint Olaf College
Palavras-chave: Phenomenology, Attention, Moral Feeling of Respect, First-Personal

Resumo

In this paper, I reject Frierson’s interpretation of Kantian reductionist phenomenology. I diagnose his failure to articulate a more robust notion of phenomenology in Kant as traceable to a misguided effort to protect pure reason from the undue influence of sensibility. But in fact Kant himself relies regularly on a phenomenological and felt first personal perspective in his practical philosophy. Once we think more broadly about what Frierson calls “the space of reasons,” we must admit a robust role for attentive reflection upon felt, phenomenological experience at the center of Kantian practical deliberation.

Biografia do Autor

Array Array, Saint Olaf College
Assistant Professor at Saint Olaf College (USA)
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Publicado
2016-06-13
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