The Husserlian doctrine about the modalities of attention

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Abstract

In this paper, I address Husserl’s theory of intentionality focusing on the problems of attention. I claim that without phenomenological reduction the specific phenomenological content of modalizations – in intentional acts – would be hard to explain. It would be impossible to understand why constant external factors (for instance, variations in the intensity of a stimulus) are accompanied by fluctuations in attention. It would also be impossible to understand the reasons why only the lived experience of causality – which I sharply distinguish from causality in the psychophysical sense of the term – transforms attention into a factor that allows the understanding of a situation by the subject who lives that experience. I claim at last that only the genetic analysis of Husserl’s late Freiburg period, with its distinction between primary and secondary attention, gives a full account of the relation between the thematic object, focused on an intentional attentive act, and the horizon that surrounds the object and gives it its ultimate meaning.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)69-84
Number of pages16
JournalPhainomenon
Volume33
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2022

Keywords

  • Attention
  • Horizon
  • Static and genetic phenomenology
  • Marginal consciousness

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