Phenomenology of 'Authentic Time' in Husserl and Heidegger
Author:
Klaus Held a
| Affiliation: | a Bergische Universit t Wuppertal, Germany |
DOI:
10.1080/09672550701445191
Publication Frequency:
5 issues per year
Published in:
International Journal of Philosophical Studies,
Volume
15,
Issue
3
September
2007
, pages 327
- 347
Subject:
Philosophy;
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Abstract
In his dialogue the Timaeus, Plato recognized two aspects of time, the past and the future, but not the present. In contrast, Aristotle's analysis of time in the Physics took its orientation from the 'now'. It is the latter path that Husserl follows with his conception of the 'original impression' (Urimpression). However, in certain parts of Husserl's Bernau Manuscripts, the present loses significance because of a novel interpretation of protention. This development, which revitalizes Plato's understanding of time, is furthered in Heidegger's late lecture Time and Being: the present can be understood on the basis of the 'withdrawal' which determines the mutual relation between the arrival as authentic future and the having-been as authentic past.
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| Keywords: Husserl; Heidegger; time; present; eternity; idealization |

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