There is no such thing as pure sensibility, everywhere [there is] intentionality, spontaneity
There is no such thing as 10 pure sensibility, everywhere [there is] intentionality, spontaneity. Edmund Husserl, First Philosophy, 407
There is no such thing as 10 pure sensibility, everywhere [there is] intentionality, spontaneity. Edmund Husserl, First Philosophy, 407
Everything that holds valid for me, I have myself posited as valid with its meaning, or it belongs to the horizon of my possibilities to 15 cognize it, possibly in […]
Judgments of perception are merely subjective. Their univer- sality pertains to the circle of human beings who concur with me 25 regarding our sensibility. And also regardless of others: every […]
every sensible property depends upon my respective sense organs and the normality or anomaly of their functioning. Edmund Husserl, First Philosophy, 391
Natural science is, to be sure, not purely rational insofar as it has need of outer experience, sensibility; but everything in it that is rational it owes to pure reason […]