LIFE PHENOMENOLOGY OF LIFE AS THE STARTING POINT OF PHILOSOPHY L A VIE PHÄNOMENOLOGIE INTEGRALE DE L A VIE COMME POINT D E DEPART DE LA PHILOSOPHI E Celebrant le vingt-cinquieme Anniversaire Livre III par les soins de ANNA-TERESA TYMIENIECKA The World Phenomenology Institute ANALECTA HUSSERLIAN A THE YEARBOOK OF PHENOMENOLOGICAL RESEARCH VOLUME L Editor- in-Chief: ANNA-TERESA TYMIENIECKA The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning Belmont, Massachusetts 25 th Anniversary Publication Book I Life In the Glory of its Radiating Manifestations Book II Life The Human Quest for an Ideal Book III Life Phenomenology of Life as the Starting Point of Philosophy LIFE PHENOMENOLOGY OF LIFE AS THE STARTING POINT OF PHILOSOPHY 25th Anniversary Publication Book III Edited by ANNA-TERESA TYMIENIECKA The World Phenomenology Institute Published under the auspices of The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning A-T. Tymieniecka, President SPRINGER-SCIENCE+BUSINESS MEDIA, B.V. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Life : phenomenology of life as the starting point of philosophy / edited by Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka. p. cm. — (25th anniversary publication ; bk. 3) (Analecta Husser1iana ; v. 50) Eng 1 i sh and French. Proceedings of the International Phenomenology Congress held Oct. 6-9, 1994, in Paris, France. Includes bibliographical reference s and index. ISBN 978-94-010-6296-1 ISBN 978-94-011-5460-4 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-011-5460-4 1. Life—Congresses. 2. Phenomenology—Congresses. I. Tymieniecka, Anna-Teresa. II. International Phenomenology Congress (1994 : Paris, France) III. Series. IV. Series : Analecta Husser 1 i ana ; v. 50 . [BD431.L418 1997] 142' .7—dc20 96-23675 ISBN 978-94-010-6296-1 Printed on acid-free paper All Rights Reserved © 1997 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht Originally published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 1997 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 1997 No part of the materia lprotected by this copyright notice may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner. TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS vii THE THEME ix INAUGURAL LECTURE ANNA-TERESA TYMIENIECKA / Life's Primogenital Timing: Time Projected by the Dynamic Articulation of the Onto- Genesis 3 PART ONE PAVING THE WAY FOR THE ONTOPOIESIS OF LIFE ANGELA ALES BELLO / The Entelechial Principle in the Ontopoiesis of Life: From Aristotle to Recent Phenomenology 25 WILLIAM EGGINTON / From the End of History to the Death of Man 33 PART TWO FROM LIVED EXPERIENCE TO LIFE a ARION L. KELKEL / De la phenomenologie des vecus l'hermeneutique de la vie: Dilthey, Husserl, Heidegger 59 JOZEF SIVAK / "La vie dans l'idee" selon Jan Patocka et son actualite 79 JEAN-MARC MOUILLIE / Le fait de vivre dans la phenomeno- a logie: Elements critiques partir de Husserl 89 PART THREE SEARCHING FOR NEW INSPIRATION IN HUSSERL FRAN<;OIS-DAVID SEBBAH / Intentionnalite et non-donation 101 NATHALIE DEPRAZ / Qu'est-ce que la hyle transcendantale? 115 PHILIPPE BECK / La vie saturee 125 v vi T ABLE OF CONTENTS PART FOUR ALONG THE HISTORICAL ITINERARY ROMANA MARTORELLI VICO / L'Apport de la scolastique 131 DARIA CARLONI / Pensee mathematique et generation chez Descartes 143 CINZIA STORTI / Les freres Schelling et la science de la vie 155 DANIELA VERDUCCI / La phenomenologie de la vie et la philo sophie selon Max Scheler 165 PART FIVE LIFE AND THE HUMAN FORGE OF SENSE CAL VIN O. SCHRAG / La recuperation du sujet phenomeno- logique: En dialogue avec Derrida, Ricoeur et Levinas 183 R. KOURENKOVA, E. PLEKHANOV, E. ROGATCHEVA AND S. SIZOVA / L' Animal - l'humain: L' Education comme un intervalle phenomenologique 193 PART SIX THE AESTHETIC SIGNIFICANCE OF EXISTENCE MARIA AVELINA CECILIA / La voie symbolico-litteraire et l'exploration de l'existence: M. de Unamuno et P. Ricoeur 209 SERGE MARGEL / La vie du heros et Ie temps du poete: Notes sur Ie sens temporel de I' aion comme survivance dans les ecrits de Pindare 229 STEFANO CATUCCI / Figures de l'art, figures de la vie: Une idee de philosophie chez Ie jeune Lukacs 247 SANDRO BRIOSI / Phenomenologie, semiotique et philosophie du langage: A propos de signes et symboles 273 MARTIN NKAFU NKEMNKIA / Vitalogie comme expression de la pen see africaine 281 REJOINDER DMITRY SHLAPENTOKH / Life/Death - Cosmos/Eschatology: Nikolai Berdiaev and the Influence of the Fedorovian Vision 301 INDEX OF NAMES 353 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The contents of this volume present the work of our fifth International Phenomenology Congress held in Paris, October 6th to 9th, 1994. First of all, I wish to express my gratitude to Madame Teresa Tymieniecka Zadora, my cousin, whose interest in our work, generous hospitality, as well help in organising the event have been essential in this, as well as in the two previous Parisian congresses of The World Phenomenology Institute. lowe her more in respect of our work than could be expressed in a few words. Professor Francis Jacques opened the door for us and received us for two days of the conference at the Centre Censier, Sorbonne Nouvelle, Universite de Paris III, and we thank him cordially and also Mr. Doge, the administrator, for their participation in and care for our enterprise, which was greatly appreciated by the participants. My usual thanks go to Isabelle Houthakker, M.A., for her expert editing and proofreading of French-language papers, and to our assis tant editor, Robert Wise, for his copy-editing and for the index. A-T.T. vii ANNA-TERESA TYMIENIECKA THE THEME Phenomenology of Life (Integral and "Scientific") as the Starting Point of Philosophy Although it has been maturing in my writings for some 40 years, I dared to come out decidedly with such a radically new approach as "phenomenology of life" only in the last two decades - with some short treatises, among them "The First Principles of the Metaphysics of Life: Charting the Human Condition".l Life is the "theme of our times", as Ortega prophetically said; but the last thing to be observed is that the obvious, and so contemporary philosophy - dispersed in innumerable side-issues - is not yet even aware of the force and necessity with which the contemporary outburst of knowledge of the human situation within the network of existence points to life as the central and crucial concern of philosophy. Throughout the centuries philosophy has given this fact only lip service. The "phenomenology of life" is the central subject of the programs which the World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning has carried out in the last two decades; and in the present volume we offer some new and strikingly inspiring insights into phe nomenology of life in progress. But what is "phenomenology of life"? To define it we say that phenomenology of life is a philosophy of life par excellence. Perennial philosophical seeking for the sufficient reason, ground, origins of beingness, for "the one and the many", stasis and movement, perdurance and change, duration and event ... find an unprecedented ground-formulation and treatment in the new field of the phenomenology of life and of the Human Condition. In contradis tinction to world-view Lebensphilosophies (Schelling, Simmel, Dilthey), as well as to process-philosophies (Whitehead) or phenomenology of biology (Hans Jonas), as well as to the philosophy of life expounded by Ortega y Gasset (restricted to the works of the human spirit), the phemomenology of life and of the Human Condition opens the complete field of being and becoming in its entire expanse. In this way we proclaim it to be the "starting point" of philosophy! First, insofar as it opens the integral field of the real. Unraveling the ix A-T. Tymieniecka (ed.), Analecta Husserliana, Vol. L, ix-xiii. © 1997 Kluwer Academic Publishers. x ANNA-TERESA TYMIENIECKA covered inner workings of nature, seeking its proto-generic and proto genetic which in myriads of fluctuating moves, operations, processes subtend the real, the virtual, the possible and the ideal on the one hand, and remaining itself suspended upon the gigantic game of elementary forces, on the other, phenomenology of life and the Human Condition takes into consideration all the meaningful circuits of the bios within the networks of its dependences; in its evolutive perspective it reaches the Human Creative Condition and the works of the human spirit: society, culture, art . ... Thus, as an integral 'underground' of reality, listening to insights in all fields of knowledge, it gives a novel form to the Leibnizian-Husserlian idea of a mathesis universalis: in a novel inter disciplinary form. Second, in fact, on the one hand, cosmos, bios and culture reveal their ontopoietic junctures within a common interplay of life. An inter play that only with the progress of today's sciences are we able in a measure to penetrate. Science also endeavors to discover and grasp this interplay, be it in segments and their fractions, in its laws and regulations each within its own limited sector. On the other hand, vindicating the autonomy of the Creative Condition of the human being and its sense giving powers, this primal philosophy of life penetrates into the onto poietic labyrinth of culture. Only the phenomenological approach which acknowledges various types of intuition and is faithful to the Husserlian "principle of principles" seeks to bring to light the specificity of each segment of reality in conjunction with others, granting each its mean ingful specificity and avoiding simplistic reductionisms. Laying bare the networks of elementary forces in their constructively fusing ontopoietic patterns for the origination of forms, phenomenology of life draws upon the results of natural sciences, art, social and cultural studies distilling their pristine nature and listening to their intuition, and seeks to cipher them in their very own meaningful forms without biases and to force their original voice into used formulations and concepts of the philosophical tradition. As such, phenomenology of life deserves to be recognized as the "scientific philosophy of life", words used by the later Husserl as if he was foreseeing our development as the fulfillment of his phenomenology. And from the perspective of the scientific philosophy/phenomenology of life Husserl's analyses reveal a potentiality for the new reading. This breaking into the established ways of interpretation of Husserlian text THE THEME xi manifests itself already in this three-volume publication celebrating the 25th anniversary of our common work. Third, the onto-poietic field which my phenomenology opens mani fests the essential features and fulfills the main prerogatives of what was attributed to metaphysics, to philosophia prima. Reaching deliber ately below the modem distinction of subject and object, we are not stopping at reality as "manifested" - life as manifested in its con stitutive forms, animal or human. Yet at this newly opened field of primogenital sense-emerging, traditional metaphysical queries receive their primal, basic formulations. If we recall Leibniz's postulates for a correct definition of an object (and he was the first to express the intuition of the "inner workings of nature"), we see that the phenome nology of life offers at long last the root factors for their satisfaction. For giving an account of an object, event, action, statement, Leibniz stipulated the necessity to bring in its "sufficient reason" - its "ground" for becoming and being. In a corollary, a definition of an object has to indicate its mode of origination. The integral scientific phenome nology/philosophy of life fulfills these postulates at the very primogenital circuits in which the object in question originates, deploying its ontic form. The investigation of the emergence of sense in the primal onto poietic becoming/unfolding is simultaneously establishing the beingness as its "sufficient reason" and its "grounding" in being. In other words, the ontopoiesis of life simultaneously pursues the on tic progress in the constructive becoming of beingness as it lays down its proto-meta physical "groundwork". Fourth, corroborating further our reference to Leibniz, we will recall that he has seen the "sufficient reason", the "ground" of a singular being, beingness, existence, as residing within it. Albeit we came to it from an entirely different horizon of thought and in an altogether different type of investigation, yet our insights into the being of beingness, of a living individual, coincide with those of Leibniz. In fact, it appears that within the ontopoietic field the suffi cient reason as well as the "ground" for the differentiation of living beings lies within each of them. We uncover this field, the field of the inner workings of life, in virtue of the essential - and philosophically crucial - insight into the differentiation-genetic-origination unfolding of the living being as such: the self-individualisation of life. The self-individ ualisation of life as the vehicle of ontopoiesis pulls all the strings of forces
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