Thank you for this, Christopher. I benefited a lot from Dermot Moran's work throughout the years. His writings on Husserl are rigorous and accessible. It was very nice to see you two in conversation.
Wonderful talk, best intro I've ever heard to Husserl. He's a hugely important transitional figure in the history of philosophy/psychology, but one that is somewhat poorly understood I feel, probably because of the complex depth of his thinking, and also his scientific orientation. From Dr. Moran's talk, it's understood he's somewhere in the realm of a scientific/psych/philos thinker. He def posed a lot of inquiries that have yet to be fully realized, in a way very similar to the thinking on the unconscious proposed by Freud and Jung, etc. We opened a lot of doors in the 20th century, but the perplexing nature of the considerations involved for experiences, sense, memory, consciousness, life, etc. will have us puzzling for many centuries, and so it goes. Awesome talk! Thank you so much.
Great video and guest as always! For those interested in Husserl’s most mature phase I can wholly recommend Moran’s commentary on Husserl’s Crisis writings-it helped me a great deal in my undergraduate studies.
Unfortunately, Husserl's philosophy is like Hegel's in that you have to go through the myriad detailed arguments/ descriptions for which there is no substitute but to laboriously go through them in their original, even the 400 page shorter Logical Investigations is a pale impression of the massive 2000 odd page original. To read Husserl's " main" works one has to go through about 6000 pages of hard philosophy
Brilliant!
Absolutely amazing to have Dermot on your show ... Thanks a lot!
Thank you for this, Christopher. I benefited a lot from Dermot Moran's work throughout the years. His writings on Husserl are rigorous and accessible. It was very nice to see you two in conversation.
this is great! please have him return to speak on Meinong! ❤
i never hear him even mentioned 😮
Wonderful talk, best intro I've ever heard to Husserl. He's a hugely important transitional figure in the history of philosophy/psychology, but one that is somewhat poorly understood I feel, probably because of the complex depth of his thinking, and also his scientific orientation. From Dr. Moran's talk, it's understood he's somewhere in the realm of a scientific/psych/philos thinker. He def posed a lot of inquiries that have yet to be fully realized, in a way very similar to the thinking on the unconscious proposed by Freud and Jung, etc. We opened a lot of doors in the 20th century, but the perplexing nature of the considerations involved for experiences, sense, memory, consciousness, life, etc. will have us puzzling for many centuries, and so it goes. Awesome talk! Thank you so much.
Great video and guest as always!
For those interested in Husserl’s most mature phase I can wholly recommend Moran’s commentary on Husserl’s Crisis writings-it helped me a great deal in my undergraduate studies.
Very concise and informative. Thanks for posting.
Unfortunately, Husserl's philosophy is like Hegel's in that you have to go through the myriad detailed arguments/ descriptions for which there is no substitute but to laboriously go through them in their original, even the 400 page shorter Logical Investigations is a pale impression of the massive 2000 odd page original. To read Husserl's " main" works one has to go through about 6000 pages of hard philosophy
Gilles Grelet's Anti-phenomenology is also interesting as a late fruit of Husserl's thought
As knowlegeble as he is humble and kind.
I feel greatly honourd to recently have met with Dr Moran i Copenhagen.