contra deficient child perception: a husserlian analysis

Autores/as

  • daniel shepherd Fordham University

Palabras clave:

Husserl, perception, children, phenomenology, Abschattung, memory

Resumen

In this paper we use Husserl’s theory of perception to explore how child and adult perception works through the same mechanisms. First, we explore Husserl’s description of sensory perception, showing that the child, like the adult, will be able to enrich the total perception of the object through access to successive appearances of an object. Next, we explore how the child’s ability to perceive objects can be enriched in complex ways, showing that an adult or a child will both be able to access a greater ‘enduring entity’ of the object. Finally, we consider the child’s ability to remember their perceptions through memory, showing how the child and the adult use the ego’s intentionality, rather than active remembering, as a component of the memory of a perception.

Biografía del autor/a

daniel shepherd, Fordham University

Doutor em Filosofia, Campos de pesquisa: Epistemologia, fenomenologia, lógica, filosofia política

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Publicado

2012-01-03

Cómo citar

shepherd, daniel. (2012). contra deficient child perception: a husserlian analysis. Childhood & Philosophy, 2(3), pp. 115–125. Recuperado a partir de https://www.e-publicacoes.uerj.br/childhood/article/view/20491

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artículos