What’s so European about the Crisis of the European Sciences? Cover Image
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What’s so European about the Crisis of the European Sciences?
What’s so European about the Crisis of the European Sciences?

Author(s): Andrew Haas
Subject(s): Philosophy of Science, Phenomenology
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: crisis; European; Husserl; implication; science; truth;

Summary/Abstract: The contemporary crisis of the European sciences and arts is not simply European – it is a crisis of universal truth. But a response is possible, as Husserl suggests, if we revivify the task of philosophy as universal science. A renaissance, therefore, in the theory and practice of the sciences and arts that inaugurates a new way of translating the language and logic of philosophy – which has animated speaking and thinking from the Greeks to us – in order to consider what never comes to presence in speech or thought, but is only just implied. This would put an end to the assumption, which precipitated the crisis, that truth is a priori finite and closed, and mark the opening of science and art to implication. Phenomenology, therefore, would point the way to a cure for the crisis of the sciences and the arts – or, if not a cure, at least to a treatment which allows us to survive, at least for the time being.

  • Issue Year: 11/2023
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 63-75
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English