Repository | Journal | Volume | Articles

(1997) Tijdschrift voor filosofie 59 (2).
Through an investigation of Husserl's concept of horizontal intentionality, the article basically argues that the horizon is intrinsically intersubjective, and that it entails an implicit reference to the intentions of possible Others. Against this background it is argued that our perceptual experience of an embodied Other, our factual encounter with the Other, is not the most basic and fundamental type of intersubjectivity. On the contrary, it presupposes a type of intersubjectivity which belongs a priori to the structure of constituting subjectivity.
Publication details
DOI: stable/40887694
Full citation:
Zahavi, D. (1997). Horizontal intentionality and transcendental intersubjectivity. Tijdschrift voor filosofie 59 (2), pp. 304-321.
References

1994
Paris, Presses Universitaires de France

1995
Paris, Vrin

1967
Paris, PUF

1952
Den Haag, Nijhoff

1954
Den Haag, Nijhoff

1976
Den Haag, Nijhoff

1992
Kopenhagen, Museum Tusculanum Press
This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.