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(2019) Human Studies 42 (4).

Heidegger and Husserl on the technological-scientific worldview

Corijn Van Mazijk

pp. 519-541

This paper discusses the relation between the later Husserl and the later Heidegger regarding their criticisms of modern science and technology. It is suggested that the overlap between both accounts is more significant than is standardly acknowledged. The paper first explores Heidegger's ideas about the "essences' of science and technology, how they allegedly determine the contemporary worldview, conceal our relation to being, and how Heidegger warrants his critical attitude toward this. It then discusses Husserl's philosophical–historical assessment of the "idea" of modern science, which Husserl believed resulted in the decapitation of philosophical questioning. Although key differences in method, aims, and their proposed solution to the dominance of the technological-scientific worldview should not be overlooked, the paper suggests that core aspects of Heidegger's analyses can be traced back to Husserl.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s10746-019-09526-2

Full citation:

Van Mazijk, C. (2019). Heidegger and Husserl on the technological-scientific worldview. Human Studies 42 (4), pp. 519-541.

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