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(1997) To work at the foundations, Dordrecht, Springer.

Phenomenalism, idealism and Gurwitsch's account of the sensory noema

Robert Welsh Jordan

pp. 55-64

The relation between phenomenology and idealism was something a number of those around this table puzzled over here back in the 60's. Professor Gurwitsch used to argue persuasively and, I think, correctly that neither perceived objects nor perceptual noemata can be correctly thought of as eide in Husserl's sense of that esoteric word. Yet one thing which makes his meaning of the word so very abstruse is the fact that Husserl entirely agrees with this conviction yet speaks all the while of the noematic objects of perceptual experiences as ideals [i.e., Ideen im Kantischen Sinn].1 From the late 1920's throughout his distinguished career, Gurwitsch argued, if I read him correctly, that the description of the perceptually meant object need not refer to an idea of the object which would be distinct from the sense or meaning of the object; the perceptual noema has, he insisted, no such constituent.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-011-5436-9_4

Full citation:

Jordan, R.W. (1997)., Phenomenalism, idealism and Gurwitsch's account of the sensory noema, in R. Stufflebeam (ed.), To work at the foundations, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 55-64.

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