An ambit without limitation non proviso phenomenology as open science and the heideggerian and marionian receptions of the “Principle of all Principles”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.5.2015.29819Keywords:
Heidegger, Marion, Husserl, intuition, opennessAbstract
This essay attempts to think the renewed relevance of Intuition in Husserl's Principle of all principles (Ideen I, 1913) as a inexcusable requirement of the Engagement of the Phenomenology. In this sense, are very illustrative the readings of Heidegger and JeanLuc Marion. Heidegger, although in Das Ende der Philosophie (1966) criticizes the Principle, however, in Die Idee der Philosophie und das Weltanschauungsproblem (1919) he defended the Principle as a proof of vitalism of Phenomenology. Marion, meanwhile, evolves to an increasingly radical stance (from Réduction et donation (1984-1989) to Étant donné (1997)) regarding the importance given to intuition without concept. The implicit claim in Principle allows reinterpret some important resources of the Husserlian Phenomenology (1913), and also allows infer some keys for a Ethics based on values extracted from the openness of the Phenomenology.