After Modernity: Husserlian Reflections on a Philosophical Tradition [Book Review]

Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (2):550-553 (1999)
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Abstract

After Modernity is a collection of fifteen short essays, ten of them previously published elsewhere, centering around interpretations of Husserl and applications of his phenomenology to large philosophical problems concerning time and the self. The volume is held together loosely by the author’s answer to the crisis of modernity, a crisis consisting in the apparent hopelessness of grounding norms in superworldly Platonic forms or the rational subject posited by Descartes and Kant. Mensch advocates returning to an Aristotelian position according to which “time is dependent on being” and “the subject is constituted by the world”. For Mensch, “it is precisely modernity’s attempt to understand temporalization as a subjective process which is the crucial error”. Far from abandoning the modern preoccupation with subjectivity, then, Mensch simply wants to deny that the subject dictates the terms of its own relation to the world. His response to the crisis of modernity therefore consists in a conception of what in the final chapter he calls “post-normative subjectivity.” The book also includes discussions of Plato, St. Augustine, Aquinas, Descartes, radical evil, Sartre’s conception of the self, John Searle and artificial intelligence, Nietzsche and Darwin, and finally multiple personality disorder.

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Taylor Carman
Barnard College

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