Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy

Nowadays, a bridge is being built between continental philosophy and analytic philosophy through phenomenology. This can be attributed to the fact that phenomenology and analytic philosophy are rooted in common questions, that their paths have crossed again and again in various ways throughout their...

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Main Author: Eylem Hacımuratoğlu
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Istanbul University Press 2023-12-01
Series:Felsefe Arkivi
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cdn.istanbul.edu.tr/file/JTA6CLJ8T5/8860ED1B0FBE41BB919C9CC162A7E7C8
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author Eylem Hacımuratoğlu
author_facet Eylem Hacımuratoğlu
author_sort Eylem Hacımuratoğlu
collection DOAJ
description Nowadays, a bridge is being built between continental philosophy and analytic philosophy through phenomenology. This can be attributed to the fact that phenomenology and analytic philosophy are rooted in common questions, that their paths have crossed again and again in various ways throughout their historical development, and partly to the similarity of philosophical expectations. The article addresses the tidal relationship between the two philosophies through the question of "meaning" and tries to clarify the background of the cooperation that has emerged in the field of philosophy of mind in recent years. The first part confronts two philosophies, one centred on meaning and linguistic analysis, the other on the analysis of linguistic acts of consciousness in which meaning emerges, through the encounter between Frege and Husserl. The second part explains how in phenomenology meaning is conceived not only as something specific to linguistic acts, but also as something that is immanent to all acts of consciousness; and how this extension of the concept of meaning leads to an interpretation of intentionality inspired by analytic philosophy. The third and last part deals with the genetic relation that phenomenology assumes between linguistic meaning and the pre-linguistic sense constituted in our immediate experience. It also argues that a philosophy soleyl limited to linguistic analysis should be complemented by a theory of experience. Phenomenology, as a philosophy that describes the essential structures of the correlation between consciousness and the world as well as their genetic constitution, can undertake the task of presenting a theory of experience that precedes the question of linguistic meaning and can therefore complement a philosophy of language. This possible contribution of phenomenology is becoming more recognised in current debates in analytic philosophy of mind.
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spelling doaj-art-a24ca003b7c74d81be0bd8a0444de50d2025-08-20T02:14:38ZdeuIstanbul University PressFelsefe Arkivi2667-76442023-12-0159789610.26650/arcp.251223123456Phenomenology and Analytic PhilosophyEylem Hacımuratoğlu0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6181-7941Mimar Sinan Güzel Sanatlar Üniversitesi, İstanbul, TürkiyeNowadays, a bridge is being built between continental philosophy and analytic philosophy through phenomenology. This can be attributed to the fact that phenomenology and analytic philosophy are rooted in common questions, that their paths have crossed again and again in various ways throughout their historical development, and partly to the similarity of philosophical expectations. The article addresses the tidal relationship between the two philosophies through the question of "meaning" and tries to clarify the background of the cooperation that has emerged in the field of philosophy of mind in recent years. The first part confronts two philosophies, one centred on meaning and linguistic analysis, the other on the analysis of linguistic acts of consciousness in which meaning emerges, through the encounter between Frege and Husserl. The second part explains how in phenomenology meaning is conceived not only as something specific to linguistic acts, but also as something that is immanent to all acts of consciousness; and how this extension of the concept of meaning leads to an interpretation of intentionality inspired by analytic philosophy. The third and last part deals with the genetic relation that phenomenology assumes between linguistic meaning and the pre-linguistic sense constituted in our immediate experience. It also argues that a philosophy soleyl limited to linguistic analysis should be complemented by a theory of experience. Phenomenology, as a philosophy that describes the essential structures of the correlation between consciousness and the world as well as their genetic constitution, can undertake the task of presenting a theory of experience that precedes the question of linguistic meaning and can therefore complement a philosophy of language. This possible contribution of phenomenology is becoming more recognised in current debates in analytic philosophy of mind.https://cdn.istanbul.edu.tr/file/JTA6CLJ8T5/8860ED1B0FBE41BB919C9CC162A7E7C8phenomenologyanalytic philosophysensemeaningintentionality
spellingShingle Eylem Hacımuratoğlu
Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy
Felsefe Arkivi
phenomenology
analytic philosophy
sense
meaning
intentionality
title Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy
title_full Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy
title_fullStr Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy
title_full_unstemmed Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy
title_short Phenomenology and Analytic Philosophy
title_sort phenomenology and analytic philosophy
topic phenomenology
analytic philosophy
sense
meaning
intentionality
url https://cdn.istanbul.edu.tr/file/JTA6CLJ8T5/8860ED1B0FBE41BB919C9CC162A7E7C8
work_keys_str_mv AT eylemhacımuratoglu phenomenologyandanalyticphilosophy