Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of View

Husserl - at least in his third intellectual career - was convinced that subject is placed at the heart of philosophy and philosophy is nothing but egology. This Cartesian character makes Husserl one of the greatest figures of modern thought. But in contemporary period, this central ego and, accompa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: H Fathzadeh
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: University of Isfahan 2010-03-01
Series:Metaphysik
Subjects:
Online Access:http://uijs.ui.ac.ir/mph/browse.php?a_code=A-10-1-12&slc_lang=en&sid=1
id doaj-c12b37c66f9f4e2db82c9c239127d5ea
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c12b37c66f9f4e2db82c9c239127d5ea2020-11-24T23:45:13ZfasUniversity of IsfahanMetaphysik2008-80862476-32762010-03-0113102112Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of ViewH Fathzadeh0 , University of Zanjan Husserl - at least in his third intellectual career - was convinced that subject is placed at the heart of philosophy and philosophy is nothing but egology. This Cartesian character makes Husserl one of the greatest figures of modern thought. But in contemporary period, this central ego and, accompanied with that, the modern thought have been challenged by poststructuralists. Because of their focus on psychoanalysis and their priority to other poststructuralist writings, Lacan's argumeats are significant. In this article, at first, we proceed with the Lacan's central idea against the Cartesian subject, and then by explaining Husserl's thoughts we will see what his defence is. Husserl, by phenomenological reduction of natural attitude inherent in natural sciences (among them psychoanalysis), places phenomenology in a different dimension and prefers it to other sciences. The process of raising empirical ego to transcendental ego supports such defence.http://uijs.ui.ac.ir/mph/browse.php?a_code=A-10-1-12&slc_lang=en&sid=1Mirror Stage Natural Attitude Empirical Ego Transcendental Ego
collection DOAJ
language fas
format Article
sources DOAJ
author H Fathzadeh
spellingShingle H Fathzadeh
Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of View
Metaphysik
Mirror Stage
Natural Attitude
Empirical Ego
Transcendental Ego
author_facet H Fathzadeh
author_sort H Fathzadeh
title Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of View
title_short Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of View
title_full Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of View
title_fullStr Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of View
title_full_unstemmed Ego in Lacan’s and Husserl\'s Point of View
title_sort ego in lacan’s and husserl\'s point of view
publisher University of Isfahan
series Metaphysik
issn 2008-8086
2476-3276
publishDate 2010-03-01
description Husserl - at least in his third intellectual career - was convinced that subject is placed at the heart of philosophy and philosophy is nothing but egology. This Cartesian character makes Husserl one of the greatest figures of modern thought. But in contemporary period, this central ego and, accompanied with that, the modern thought have been challenged by poststructuralists. Because of their focus on psychoanalysis and their priority to other poststructuralist writings, Lacan's argumeats are significant. In this article, at first, we proceed with the Lacan's central idea against the Cartesian subject, and then by explaining Husserl's thoughts we will see what his defence is. Husserl, by phenomenological reduction of natural attitude inherent in natural sciences (among them psychoanalysis), places phenomenology in a different dimension and prefers it to other sciences. The process of raising empirical ego to transcendental ego supports such defence.
topic Mirror Stage
Natural Attitude
Empirical Ego
Transcendental Ego
url http://uijs.ui.ac.ir/mph/browse.php?a_code=A-10-1-12&slc_lang=en&sid=1
work_keys_str_mv AT hfathzadeh egoinlacansandhusserlspointofview
_version_ 1725496742202310656