Some Moments of Wonder Emergent within Transcendental Phenomenological Analyses

There is a distinctive wonder bordering on and awakening to the philosophy of religion within Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology. This is not primarily a wonder directed to how things are or that they are, but rather the wonder connected to the most fundamental principle of transcendental phenom...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Open theology
Main Author: Hart, James G. 1936- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: De Gruyter 2020
In: Open theology
Further subjects:B transcendental phenomenology
B manifestness
B Wonder
B Edmund Husserl
B metafact
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Summary:There is a distinctive wonder bordering on and awakening to the philosophy of religion within Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology. This is not primarily a wonder directed to how things are or that they are, but rather the wonder connected to the most fundamental principle of transcendental phenomenology. That principle is the ancient principle of the convertibility of being with what is true or the inseparability of being and manifestation. Phenomenological wonder is primarily at the correlation of being as what is true or made manifest with consciousness. And yet there is an even more basic phenomenological wonder which founds this correlation, and that is the manifestness of first-person experience within which all other wonder emerges.
ISSN:2300-6579
Contains:Enthalten in: Open theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1515/opth-2020-0004