Knowledge and interest∗1
- 1 January 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Inquiry
- Vol. 9 (1-4) , 285-300
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00201746608601463
Abstract
Husserl saw as a reason for the crisis of a positivistic science its dissociation from practical interests. His remedy was to institute a purely contemplative attitude which should not only release the sciences from the grip of the illusion that the world is a ready‐made universe of facts to be grasped in purely descriptive terms, but also, by its own therapeutic powers, lead to ‘a new kind of practice’. In adhering to this traditional concept of the relation of knowledge to interest Husserl misconceived the scientific crisis. Even though phenomenological description would effectively dispel the illusion of objectivism, objectivism in no way prevents science from influencing practice; what was needed was not to restore the practical significance of the sciences by making them finally break with interest, but rather to reveal the true relationship of knowledge and interest which the objectivistic attitude conceals. After outlining the fundamental interests guiding the respective scientific enterprises, the author summarizes in five theses what he takes to be the basic aspects of the relationship between knowledge and interest.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Der Sinn der Unterscheidung von Theorie und Praxis in der griechischen PhilosophieZeitschrift für Evangelische Ethik, 1964