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Publication details

Publisher: Nijhoff

Place: The Hague

Year: 1960

Pages: 1-6

ISBN (Undefined): 9789401746625

Full citation:

, "Introduction", in: Cartesian meditations, The Hague, Nijhoff, 1960

Abstract

I have particular reason for being glad that I may talk about transcendental phenomenology in this, the most venerable abode of French science.1 France's greatest thinker, René Descartes, gave transcendental phenomenology new impulses through his Meditations; their study acted quite directly on the transformation of an already developing phenomenology into a new kind of transcendental philosophy. Accordingly one might almost call transcendental phenomenology a neo-Cartesianism, even though it is obliged — and precisely by its radical development of Cartesian motifs — to reject nearly all the well-known doctrinal content of the Cartesian philosophy.

Publication details

Publisher: Nijhoff

Place: The Hague

Year: 1960

Pages: 1-6

ISBN (Undefined): 9789401746625

Full citation:

, "Introduction", in: Cartesian meditations, The Hague, Nijhoff, 1960