Phenomenological Reviews

Series | Book | Chapter

147426

The vertical intentionality of time-consciousness and sense-giving

Hiroshi Kojima

pp. 79-93

Abstract

In my "The Transcendental Reflection of Life without a Transcendental Ego,"1 I argue that the agent of transcendental reflection is not the so-called transcendental ego, but life itself; that transcendental reflection is a derivative mode of the originally non-reflective consciousness of life and therefore, that the phenomenological reduction, as the methodic basis of the phenomenological approach to the matter itself, should have not only a reflective component but also a non-reflective, (non-positional) stance in relation to life itself. In other words, the psychological ego of Husserl or rather "life-ego" (I prefer this locution in order to stress the ego's relation to the life-world) is not the transcendental ego's worldly self-objectivation, as Husserl thought, but rather a type of being in the world whose self-awareness is, at once, both reflectively and non-reflectively conscious.

Publication details

Published in:

Hopkins Burt C (1997) Husserl in contemporary context: prospects and projects for phenomenology. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 79-93

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-1804-2_5

Full citation:

Kojima Hiroshi (1997) „The vertical intentionality of time-consciousness and sense-giving“, In: B.C. Hopkins (ed.), Husserl in contemporary context, Dordrecht, Springer, 79–93.