Apocalyptic Phenomenology: The Culmination of the Phenomenological Movement
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- It is phenomenology in the original sense of the phainomenon as the self-disclosure of an essence, a noumenon;
- It is phenomenology as the realization of the universal a priori of correlation;
- It is apocalyptic in the sense of the emphatic expression of phenomenology as a philosophy of revelation;
- It is apocalyptic in the sense of the ultimate fulfillment not only of particular aspects of reality but also of reality as a whole;
- It is apocalyptic in the sense of being disclosed in an appropriate study of the history of the phenomenological movement as a philosophical school. In this sense, the historical label “the phenomenological movement” discloses a higher phenomenological meaning–the meaning of the movement of self-disclosure–culminating in what I term apocalyptic phenomenology.
2. Phenomenology
- It is identical to the phenomenological movement rooted in Austrian philosophy and developed by its influential representatives as described for the first time in detail by Herbert Spiegelberg (Spiegelberg 1960, vols I-II; Zahavi 2018).
- It is seen as a complex methodology by which experience is analyzed. As a result, we arrive at a better, deeper, and more complete understanding of reality, while the concrete form of this understanding varies in the works of different phenomenological authors beginning with the logical-transcendental to the existential and the theological approaches (Luft and Overgaard 2012, pp. 243–87).
- It is conceived as a set of philosophical problems, such as intentionality, consciousness, being, time, the other, life, icon, idol, etc., which are central in various branches of contemporary philosophy (Luft and Overgaard 2012, pp. 123–371).
- Phenomenology can also be seen as an introduction to the establishment of a new kind of metaphysics in the future, as proposed by Edmund Husserl and realized in specific ways by Martin Heidegger or by his strongest critic Emmanuel Lévinas (Luijpen 1965; Walton 2012).
- Phenomenology has been considered a language game originating in German and French philosophical vocabularies that cannot be properly translated into plain philosophical English. Its problems can be better understood if they are formulated in a more accessible way, such as when “intentionality” is termed “aboutness” and analyzed accordingly (Drummond 2012).
3. Apocalyptic
4. Apocalyptic Phenomenology
4.1. The Millennial Character of “the Phenomenological Movement”
4.2. Phenomenology as Philosophy of Revelation
4.3. A Phenomenology of Newness
5. Newness
5.1. What Is New?
5.2. Several Kinds of Newness
5.3. Philosophies of Newness
5.4. Nouveauté Novatrice
6. Neology
7. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The author of this article was schooled in the philosophical academy founded by Professor Josef Seifert. This school maintained a genealogy of personal discipleship beginning with Franz Brentano through Edmund Husserl, Max Scheler, and Dietrich von Hildebrand up to its founder and first rector. At the same time, Barry Smith, for a while also a member of this school, defined the original orientation of the author through his expertise on Austrian Philosophy interpreted in the context of an Oxford-style logical analysis. Thinkers like Roderick Chisholm, Richard Swinburne, and Alvin Plantinga have influenced the shaping of what is now termed apocalyptic phenomenology in their characteristic ways. Even more importantly, the thought of Miklos Vetö, William Desmond and Sir Roger Scruton must be mentioned among the factors of influence as these thinkers connected Central-European thought with French and Anglo-American thinking. Overwhelmingly significant in this context is the Central-European tradition itself, which includes thinkers of various national origins, a tradition apparently fragmented today but at its core it possesses epochal importance. Central-European thought carries an intellectual richness that can and must be explored for the sake of a fruitful philosophical development of the present and the future. |
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Mezei, B.M. Apocalyptic Phenomenology: The Culmination of the Phenomenological Movement. Religions 2022, 13, 1077. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111077
Mezei BM. Apocalyptic Phenomenology: The Culmination of the Phenomenological Movement. Religions. 2022; 13(11):1077. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111077
Chicago/Turabian StyleMezei, Balázs M. 2022. "Apocalyptic Phenomenology: The Culmination of the Phenomenological Movement" Religions 13, no. 11: 1077. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111077
APA StyleMezei, B. M. (2022). Apocalyptic Phenomenology: The Culmination of the Phenomenological Movement. Religions, 13(11), 1077. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111077