Revision of the confrontation between heidegger and Husserl. The protocontingency of the lifeworld and its essential structures
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.17.2020.29704Keywords:
Heidegger, Husserl, contingency, protofacticityAbstract
The confrontation between Heidegger and Husserl, ever present in philosophical debates, should be reviewed in the light of Husserl’s late inquiries into protofacticity. Concerning the ontology of the lifeworld, it addresses some of the issues of Heidegger’s characterization of Dasein as being-in-the-world: Protofacts constitute an already given sense-horizon, which the ego must re-configurate in its praxis. This unmodalizable primal facts host a core of protocontingency that accounts for the factual contingency not only of the categories of experience, but of the world, the ego and of finite beings: Understood as processes or subjected to qualitative changes in their essential structures, their mode of being is characterized by an essential openness. Both thinkers sustain the contingency of the world, for which only the hic et nunc factual experience of a mundane, incarnated ego can account.
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