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

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

Abstract

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.

Autor/innen-Biografie

Array Array, Saint Olaf College
Assistant Professor at Saint Olaf College (USA)
Zitationen anzeigen

Crossmark

Metriken

Veröffentlicht
2016-06-13
Rubrik
Discussions