TY - CHAP
T1 - In the Midst of Being
T2 - The Journey into the Internality of Reality in Hedwig Conrad-Martius’ Metaphysics
AU - Miron, Ronny
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This article delineates the main milestones in the trajectory to the internality of Being in HCM’s thinking against Husserl’s transcendentalism. It starts by uncovering the multi-aspect duality that characterizes the real being, continues in encountering the limitations and constraints that are imposed by a study anchored in the appearances of the real external world, and culminates in the articulation of the internality of Being as “selfness” (Selbsthaftigkeit or Selberkeit) that typifies real beings and the spiritual-I. This trajectory is not marked by HCM herself, but like any phenomenological journey it is personal and can be best carried out in the first person. The following discussion delineates the path to the internality of Being in Husserl’s phenomenology, in which the gap between the internal and the external is intensified to the point of the reduction of the external world. As a result, the world is eliminated and sometimes even seems entirely forgotten. In contrast, for HCM, there is no such opposition. On the contrary, in her thinking the simultaneous gaze to the internal and the external aspects of reality is preserved and the thematization of the gap between the two transpires as a useful hermeneutical tool for achieving an abundant and complex perception of the internality of Being that in no way leaves behind its external dimensions and the world in general.
AB - This article delineates the main milestones in the trajectory to the internality of Being in HCM’s thinking against Husserl’s transcendentalism. It starts by uncovering the multi-aspect duality that characterizes the real being, continues in encountering the limitations and constraints that are imposed by a study anchored in the appearances of the real external world, and culminates in the articulation of the internality of Being as “selfness” (Selbsthaftigkeit or Selberkeit) that typifies real beings and the spiritual-I. This trajectory is not marked by HCM herself, but like any phenomenological journey it is personal and can be best carried out in the first person. The following discussion delineates the path to the internality of Being in Husserl’s phenomenology, in which the gap between the internal and the external is intensified to the point of the reduction of the external world. As a result, the world is eliminated and sometimes even seems entirely forgotten. In contrast, for HCM, there is no such opposition. On the contrary, in her thinking the simultaneous gaze to the internal and the external aspects of reality is preserved and the thematization of the gap between the two transpires as a useful hermeneutical tool for achieving an abundant and complex perception of the internality of Being that in no way leaves behind its external dimensions and the world in general.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118340172&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-68783-0_10
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-68783-0_10
M3 - فصل
T3 - Women in the History of Philosophy and Sciences
SP - 211
EP - 236
BT - Women in the History of Philosophy and Sciences
PB - Springer Nature
ER -