Europe and Mankind. Husserl’s Biased Reflections on the Origin of Philosophy and Not Europeanized Civilizations
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.7.2018.29943Keywords:
Husserl, cultural universals, noneuropean philosophy, mankind, organism, thinkeringAbstract
Nowhere does the theory-laden character of Husserl’s phenomenological intuitions become as apparent as in his reflections on cultural philosophy. It is his theory that the qualification of one‘s own tradition as one of many manifestations of something valid in itself and binding for all is a unique achievement of Greek-European philosophy. However, that conviction can be found equally in South Asian (Indian) “doctrines of Oneness” as well as in East Asian (Chinese) instances of the “Golden Rule”. Every person with a command of a natural language is capable of such an insight. The most appropriate model for individual civilizations is not the sphere metaphor, which draws on a Platonic idea of organism, the model that Husserl adopted for his conception of “home” and “foreign worlds”, but rather the image of tinkering introduced by Claude Lévi-Strauss for illiterate societies and used by François Jacob to illustrate the present biological concept of organism. Regarding cultural universals, Husserl also relies on classical ontological reflections rather than on recent biological models. The most inter-esting anthropological universals from the point of view of cultural philosophy are, however, not essential, but contingent universals.
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