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- Title
Review of Emiliano Trizio's Philosophy's Nature: Husserl's Phenomenology, Natural Science, and Metaphysics.
- Authors
French, Steven
- Abstract
Sadly, Husserl himself was unable to grasp this opportunity, and as we all know, and as Trizio notes, the I Crisis i remained unfinished (ibid., p. 285). However, according to Trizio, although continental philosophers have focussed on Husserl's finger-pointing at Galileo and his mathematization of nature as the cause of the crisis, they have failed to appreciate the significance of this, and the rise of modern physics more generally, for the overall development of Husserl's philosophy (p. 4; unless otherwise indicated, all page references are to I Philosophy's Nature i ). Husserl's I Crisis of European Sciences i ... is often portrayed as his most influential and engaging published work. In this regard, and as Trizio emphasizes in the final chapter, unnumbered and simply titled "Conclusion", transcendental phenomenology does not provide yet another metaphysical interpretation of the being of the world but, instead, gives us the intuitive elucidation of its sense (p. 301).
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of nature; APPLYING Mathematics: Immersion, Inference, Interpretation (Book); GENERAL relativity (Physics); METAPHYSICS; REALISM; PHILOSOPHY of science; PHENOMENOLOGY
- Publication
Husserl Studies, 2023, Vol 39, Issue 3, p345
- ISSN
0167-9848
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10743-023-09331-x