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Hegel, Husserl and the Phenomenology of Historical Worlds - Tanja Staehler

Hegel, Husserl and the Phenomenology of Historical Worlds

By: Tanja Staehler

eText | 7 December 2016 | Edition Number 1

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GWF Hegel famously described philosophy as 'its own time apprehended in thoughts', reflecting a desire that we increasingly experience, namely, the desire to understand our complex and fast-changing world. But how can we philosophically describe the world we live in? When Hegel attempted his systematic account of the historical world, he needed to conceive of history as rational progress to allow for such description. After the events of the twentieth century, we are rightfully doubtful about such progress.

However, in the twentieth century, another German philosopher, Edmund Husserl, attempted a similar project when he realised that a philosophical account of our human experience requires attending to the historical world we live in. According to Husserl, the Western world is a world in crisis. In this book, Tanja Staehler explores how Husserl thus radicalises Hegel’s philosophy by providing an account of historical movement as open. Husserl’s phenomenology allows thinking of historical worlds in the plural, without hierarchy, determined by ethics and aesthetics. Staehler argues that, through his radicalization of Hegel’s philosophy, Husserl provides us with a historical phenomenology and a coherent concept of a culture that points to the future for phenomenology as a philosophy that provides the methodological grounding for a variety of qualitative approaches in the humanities and social sciences.
Industry Reviews
Staehler’s book is important for bringing bring German Idealism and Phenomenology into dialogue in a way that is illuminating for both traditions. Even more important, however, is the book’s central question regarding the possibility of philosophical reflection and the centrality of historical embeddedness for its emergence. Her exploration of the issue is lucid and thought-provoking and invites the reader - in the way that philosophy at its best can do - to revisit those aspects of our experience which are fundamental yet mostly unthematized.
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