PHENOMENOLOGY OF EVIDENCE: PROMISES, PROBLEMS, AND PROSPECTS Cover Image
  • Price 4.50 €

PHENOMENOLOGY OF EVIDENCE: PROMISES, PROBLEMS, AND PROSPECTS
PHENOMENOLOGY OF EVIDENCE: PROMISES, PROBLEMS, AND PROSPECTS

Author(s): George Heffernan
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: Instytut Filozofii i Socjologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: phenomenology; theory of knowledge; evidence; epistemic justification.

Summary/Abstract: According to Ricoeur, phenomenology is “for a good part the history of Husserlian heresies.” In this paper, I argue that, at the crossroads between a possible “topography of heresies” and a potential “geography of horizons,” phenomenology of evidence takes “the road to renewal” in pursuit of knowledge of knowledge and truth about truth. In doing so, I suggest that phenomenology of evidence is not “heresy” against “orthodox” or “analytical” theory of knowledge. Rather, in so far as it is required by a phenome-nological description of knowledge, phenomenology of evidence represents critical heterodoxy in the face of dogmatic orthodoxy. As such, it serves as a first step on “the road to renewal” of reflection on truth. Thus phenomenology of evidence emerges as one of “the many faces of contemporary phenomenology,” and as a very bright one indeed. In support of this position, I present arguments in the form of ten lessons from phenomenology of evidence for contemporary theory of knowledge.

  • Issue Year: 2015
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 9-24
  • Page Count: 16