NATURALIZING CONSCIOUSNESS? HUSSERL AND THE THESIS OF HUMAN EXCEPTION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.11.2014.29535Keywords:
Phenomenology, naturalism, transcendental philosophy, schafferAgencies:
PAPIIT de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de MéxicoAbstract
One of the key aspects in the development of the social sciences and humanities today is the adaptation of naturalistic approaches. Naturalists programs reject the status of the human that had traditionally defended philosophy holding that consciousness is reducible to a contingent fact and, therefore, can be understood from a purely objectivist approach. The French philosopher Jean-Marie Schaeffer calls this approach the “thesis of human exception” and argues that the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl is the latest example of this approach. Try to show that the anti-naturalism so characteristic of Husserlian phenomenology is sustainable despite criticism of Schaeffer. Here, looking briefly to explore the possibility and way of a naturalized phenomenology.