1 The early Husserl on lifeworld

Heidegger develops the concept of the world already in the early Freiburg lecture courses of the years 1919 to 1923, in which he proposes a renewed conception of phenomenology through a comparison with Husserlian phenomenology, and in particular with the Husserlian concept of “Lifeworld” (Lebenswelt). In this paper, I first want to show that although the theme of the lifeworld becomes central only in later works, especially in The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology, Husserl begins to deal with this concept before 1920, anticipating some fundamental issues of the Crisis.Footnote 1 Moreover, I intend to discuss the way in which Heidegger revisited the issue of the world in the early Freiburg lecture courses by means of a critique of Husserl’s analysis, focusing on perceptual experience as “environmental experience” and on the “world-character” of life. Finally, I will point out that the Heideggerian rethinking of the concept of lifeworld is closely connected to the recognition of the immanent historicity of life, while Husserl only later takes into account, but in a different way, the historicity of the lifeworld. In fact, the major point I want to make is that Heidegger’s understanding of the lifeworld radically differs from Husserl’s precisely in its emphasis on the historical nature of life itself. Although in the 1920s Husserl’s concept of the lifeworld expands to include the historical and cultural dimension, it should be noted that for Heidegger it is the self that is historical in itself.

Husserl’s concept of lifeworld is linked to that of “natural attitude” (natürliche Einstellung). In the lectures of 1923/1924 on First Philosophy Husserl explains that in the natural attitude the intentional life of consciousness does not manifest itself, because it is completely “given over and lost in the world.”Footnote 2 The natural attitude is based on an unexpressed and naive faith in the real existence of the world, which is experienced in its obviousness. Instead, Husserl intends to bring to light this intuitive world, which is already given in pre-scientific experience, since it is the presupposition of all science.

Husserl addresses this theme already in his teaching years in Göttingen, and specifically in the lectures of the 1907 summer semester entitled Ding und Raum, where he claims that “in the natural attitude of spirit, an existing world stands before our eyes,” a world in which we are included: “We find ourselves to be centers of reference for the rest of the world; it is our environment. (…) In this same world I also find other Egos. They, like us, have their environment in this same world.”Footnote 3 Husserl intends to demonstrate that this immediately given perceptual world is the basis not only of science, but also of phenomenology as a rigorous science. However, the natural attitude must be replaced by the phenomenological attitude, which can be obtained through the phenomenological epoché, which suspends the naive belief in the existence of the world.

The notion of natural attitude was developed in the lectures of 1910/1911 on The Basic Problems of Phenomenology, the subtitle of which indicates that the central theme is the “natural concept of the world.” This concept had previously been elaborated by Richard Avenarius, to whom Husserl dedicates an “instructive excursus.”Footnote 4 The natural concept of the world is of fundamental importance for Husserl precisely because it is that of the natural attitude.Footnote 5 Indeed, the lectures begin with the description of “the natural attitude, in which we all live and from which we thus start when we bring about the philosophical transformation of our viewpoint.”Footnote 6 This attitude, in which the ego “finds himself, and he finds himself at all times as a center of a surrounding,” lies at the basis of the “phenomenological reduction,” which Husserl introduced for the first time during the lectures of 1906/1907.Footnote 7 Husserl states that “the natural attitude is therefore the attitude of experience,” but the crucial point is that “experience has its legitimacy,” on which the judgments of science are also founded.Footnote 8 In fact, even when the sciences refer to what is not experienced, as in the case of the exact sciences, they remain dependent on this foundation of legitimacy, that is, on the immediate given of experience. In this regard, Husserl notes that the world of the natural attitude is not something that is definitively overcome once the scientific attitude is adopted: “The natural concept of the world is not that concept which humans have formed for themselves prior to science; rather, it is the concept of the world that comprises the sense of the natural attitude both before and after science.”Footnote 9 Indeed, Husserl maintains that the natural concept of the world is not contingent, but “valid in an absolute and a priori sense.”Footnote 10 On the contrary, Avenarius does not exclude that the natural concept of the world could be rationally modified on the basis of reasons deriving from experience. By means of epoché and reduction Husserl intends to achieve that “transformation of our viewpoint” that characterizes phenomenology. In this way we can understand another criticism addressed to Avenarius, who would not make the fundamental distinction between the empirical ego, which is present in the world, and the transcendental ego.Footnote 11 The reason is that Avenarius had not grasped the need to implement that neutralization of the thesis of existence in which the phenomenological epoché consists.

Husserl takes up the description of the natural attitude and the natural concept of the world in the first book of Ideas (1913), at the beginning of the second section, entitled The Considerations Fundamental to Phenomenology. Indeed, in a 1937 text, published as an appendix to Krisis, Husserl states that “in Ideas the starting point of the path was the ‘natural concept of the world.’ It is the ‘concept’ of the world of the ‘natural attitude’ or, as I say better now, the pre- and extra-scientific lifeworld.”Footnote 12 In fact, in the first book of Ideas, Husserl connects the natural attitude to the “natural world,” that is, to “the world in the usual sense of the word,” which must be “put in brackets” by means of the phenomenological epoché.Footnote 13 However, the approach of Ideas is somewhat different from that of the lectures of 1910/1911, because in the volume of 1913 the eidetics has priority, with the aim of showing the radical difference between the way of being of consciousness and that of the world. On the other hand, in the lectures on The Basic Problems of Phenomenology Husserl intends to carry out “an experiential phenomenology (…) which is not a theory concerned with essence.”Footnote 14

The text in which Husserl uses the term Lebenswelt for the first time is probably Appendix XIII to the second book of Ideas, which dates back to the late ’10s.Footnote 15 It is noteworthy that Heidegger was familiar with the research contained in the second book of Ideas, which is composed of materials dating largely from the later years of Göttingen (1912–1915), and he appreciated them more than those of the first book.Footnote 16 In Section Three, entitled The Constitution of the Spiritual World, Husserl describes the “surrounding world” (Umwelt) in relation to the “personalistic attitude,” partially taking up the analysis of the lectures of 1910–1911 and of the first book of Ideas. The surrounding world as “personal world” is the world that the egological subject experiences, and therefore is “a world ‘for me.’”Footnote 17 This text thus anticipates, at least in some respects, the theme of the lifeworld that Husserl will develop in Krisis. But it is only in Appendix XIII that Husserl introduces the concept of lifeworld, noting that “the lifeworld of persons escapes natural science.”Footnote 18 In fact, from a methodological point of view, the lifeworld is not about causality but about motivation. More precisely, “the lifeworld is the natural world—in the attitude of natural life we are living functioning subjects.”Footnote 19 Phenomenology, as “apriori description,” has to address the life of the subject in order to identify “the essential form of a surrounding world” and, correlatively, “the essential form of personality.”Footnote 20 In this text, however, the concept of lifeworld also takes on a second connotation, which comes closest to the natural concept of the world, since Husserl intends to describe “the essential structure of a world that remains intuitive,” that is, “the ‘transcendental-aesthetic world.’”Footnote 21

Husserl therefore begins to deal with the theme of the lifeworld at the end of the ’10s, contrary to the claim of some interpreters, who suggest that it assumes a certain importance only in the late period.Footnote 22 However, in the texts of the Nachlass published under the title Die Lebenswelt and dating back to these years, there is neither a single definition of the term Lebenswelt, nor a systematic treatment of this concept, which takes on different meanings.Footnote 23 In the ’20s Husserl’s investigation, which was initially addressed to the field of “transcendental aesthetics” and considered the lifeworld as a world of intuition and perception, expands, taking into consideration also the historical and cultural dimension of the lifeworld, which will become central in Krisis.Footnote 24 It is precisely here that a fundamental difference emerges compared to Heidegger’s analysis in the early Freiburg lecture courses, since from the beginning the lifeworld is for him a “temporal-historical phenomenon.”Footnote 25

The concept of lifeworld is present in the lectures given by Husserl in Freiburg in the 1919 summer semester, entitled Natur und Geist (Nature and Spirit). These lectures are particularly important because they are among those that Heidegger attended.Footnote 26 Here Husserl uses the term Lebenswelt, without, however, explicitly clarifying it, to express the pre-scientific world of experience: “A world of experience, an intuitive world is already given to our scientific activities even if only occasionally, a world that, in accordance with consciousness, is there for us immediately and remains there, even if all thoughts (…) that come from science disappear.”Footnote 27 The scientific operations thus form an “upper layer” that is founded on the lifeworld.Footnote 28 With reference to Kantian transcendental aesthetics, understood as a doctrine of sensible and intuitive objects, Husserl intends to develop an a priori science of the world of experience. This “transcendental aesthetics” concerns “the typical structure of the pre-given world.”Footnote 29 Husserl’s analysis is therefore aimed at the “pre-given lifeworld,” understood as the “world of pure and sensible intuition.”Footnote 30 In this way Husserl outlines “the necessary task to describe the intuitive lifeworld in its concrete typicality,” even if in the lectures he actually limits himself to a transcendental aesthetics of the physical nature.Footnote 31

These quotes already suggest the closeness between the Husserlian issue of the lifeworld and the analysis that Heidegger carries out in the early Freiburg lecture courses, starting from the one held in the war emergency semester of 1919. However, some fundamental differences also emerge. First of all, Husserl conceives phenomenology as “transcendental phenomenology,” i.e. as “a priori science of pure consciousness.”Footnote 32 Furthermore, the phenomenological attitude that Husserl describes implies that the phenomenologist is a “radically uninvolved spectator of the world.”Footnote 33 On the contrary, Heideggerian phenomenology does not address pure consciousness, but “life in and for itself,” in which we are necessarily involved, since life is “something from which we have no distance to see it (…), because we are it itself.”Footnote 34 The phenomenology of the young Heidegger therefore appears as a “hermeneutical phenomenology of the lifeworld,” whose starting point is not the critique of the “natural attitude,” as in Husserl, but the critique of the theoretical attitude, which characterizes not only the sciences, but also Husserl’s phenomenology itself.Footnote 35

2 Revisiting the lifeworld with the young Heidegger

Already in the lectures held in the war emergency semester of 1919 Heidegger introduces the theme of the “environmental experience” (Umwelterlebnis) in order to criticize the “theoretical attitude,” which in his opinion includes Husserl’s phenomenology.Footnote 36 Incidentally, the term Lebenswelten (in the plural form) is also present in the preparatory notes, dating back to the years 1918–1919, for a lecture course on The Philosophical Foundations of Medieval Mysticism, which was supposed to be held in the winter semester of 1919/1920.Footnote 37 In its place, Heidegger gave the lectures entitled Basic Problems of Phenomenology, where the theme of the world becomes central. In the lectures of 1919 Heidegger rethinks Husserl’s phenomenology in order to develop a pre-theoretical “primordial science,” thus laying the foundations for a hermeneutic conversion of phenomenology itself, no longer based on the method of reduction.Footnote 38 This is confirmed in Being and Time, where Heidegger writes that “the analysis of the environing-world (Umwelt) and, in general terms, the ‘hermeneutics of facticity’ of Dasein” have been elaborated “since the winter semester of 1919/1920.”Footnote 39 However, Heidegger begins to deal with the theme of the world already during the war emergency semester of 1919, even if in these years he does not even use the term “Dasein,” but speaks of “factical life.”Footnote 40 In particular, Heidegger refers to the “world-character (Weltcharakter) of life,” which indicates the context of significance in which life is situated.Footnote 41

Heidegger’s “phenomenological decade” thus begins in 1919, although there are several differences between the “hermeneutics of facticity” of the early Freiburg lecture courses and the analysis developed in the lectures held in Marburg and in Being and Time.Footnote 42 The fundamental difference is represented by the “question of being” (Seinsfrage), which becomes central in the work of 1927. Here Heidegger argues that the theme of the world must be understood on the basis of a “fundamental ontology,” while in the early lectures the theme of the world was not at all connected to the question of being, which had not yet been introduced.

In the lectures of 1919 Heidegger outlines the essential characteristics of experience, considering it from the beginning as situated in the world. With an emphatic expression, he says that philosophy itself is at a “methodological cross-road.” It has to decide whether to turn to objectivity, through knowledge, or to environmental experience, through a “leap” into the world.Footnote 43 In the lectures of the years 1920/1921 Heidegger maintains that “life experience is more than mere experience which takes cognizance of. It designates the whole active and passive pose of the human being toward the world.”Footnote 44 In this context, he indicates “what is experienced—what is lived as experience—as the ‘world,’ not the ‘object.’ ‘World’ is that in which one can live (one cannot live in an object).”Footnote 45 The world is therefore the context of significance in which there is the possibility of experiencing.

Moreover, in the lectures of 1919 Heidegger focuses on perceptual experience understood as “environmental experience.” By means of a sort of “phenomenological exercise” he intends to describe what we properly see when, upon entering a university classroom, we come across the lectern from which the professor lectures. This exercise has a methodological goal, since it aims to show that the use of objectifying categories is inadequate. In fact, Heidegger states that, upon entering the classroom, I do not actually perceive sense data, but “I see the lectern at which I am to speak (…). In pure experience there is no ‘founding’ interconnection, as if I first of all see intersecting brown surfaces, which then reveal themselves to me as a box, then as a desk, then as an academic lecturing desk, a lectern (…). All that is simply bad and misguided interpretation, diversion from a pure seeing into the experience.”Footnote 46 First of all, we cannot postulate an isolated subject who first perceives sense data, from which it constitutes the object with its own meaning. On the contrary, “I see the lectern in one fell swoop.”Footnote 47 Secondly, we cannot think of the lectern as an isolated object, given that we encounter it within an environing-world, that is, in a context of significance: “In the experience of seeing the lectern something is given to me from out of an immediate environing-world.”Footnote 48 The object, as individually considered, is instead the result of an operation of abstraction. In environmental experience, each object is therefore meaningful from the start. In the lectures of 1919/1920 Heidegger introduces the expression “‘as’ (als) of meaningfulness,” in order to indicate that we experience something as something, e.g. as a lectern, within a context of significance.Footnote 49 In this way Heidegger deconstructs that hierarchy, based on the primacy of perception, in which the knowing subject attributes meanings to merely sensible objects.

In this regard, it is interesting to compare Heidegger’s conception with Husserl’s, taking up the Natur und Geist lectures that Husserl held in Freiburg in the 1919 summer semester, of which I have already spoken. In these lectures Husserl distinguishes between “real predicates,” which are independent of the operations of consciousness, and “meaning-predicates,” which instead depend on such operations.Footnote 50 According to Husserl, “the spiritual meaning, which consists of certain predicates belonging to the object, is originally the functional correlate of certain subjective acts that give meaning to pre-given objects. It follows that such predicates can only be fully understood if one goes back to active subjectivity.”Footnote 51 Through the distinction between real predicates and meaning-predicates, Husserl arrives at “a certain concept of reality.” In fact, “by going back from the meaning-predicates to their substrate-objects we come to the ultimate substrates, which are already complete objects and which are still completely devoid of meaning.”Footnote 52 Objects therefore have a layered structure, where the founding layer is represented by the mere sense-thing, which is devoid of the predicates deriving from intentional operations. If we go back to these ultimate substrates, “the pure real remains for us as an intuitive core, which is ultimately presupposed in all bestowals of meaning by subjective acts, as an object that precedes all acts, all active subjective operations.”Footnote 53 In particular, “what we call mere reality, mere object of nature, is something concrete and completely self-standing, which, even when it bears meaning-predicates, could nevertheless exist as a concrete, self-standing object even without them.”Footnote 54 Husserl therefore maintains that, in this stratification of experience, “the ideally lowest level is mere nature, which is a constant structure even in the spiritually formed world. Many layers are built upon it.”Footnote 55 In general terms, for Husserl perception represents the primary access to the world, that is, the original mode of givenness of the phenomena, and thus the fundamental layer of experience, as confirmed by the second book of Ideas, which Heidegger knew. In fact, this book begins with an analysis of “material nature,” which represents the layer on which all the others are founded.Footnote 56

However, Heidegger believes that this layered conception of experience is by no means “the most unbiased and straightforward description of what is immediately given,” but an “inaccurate description.”Footnote 57 In fact, in everyday experience what Husserl calls “meaning-predicates” are experienced first, while sensible predicates, referring to the “mere object of nature,” come to light only later, by means of a procedure of abstraction. The mere thing is thus the result of a peculiar “deworlding” (Entweltichung) starting from the concrete thing, which is always and necessarily located within the world. In contrast to Husserl, Heidegger argues that objects are experienced from the outset as “significance,” i.e. as meaningful objects. But Heidegger also understands the concept of reality in a different way. Indeed, he argues that reality is “a specifically theoretical characteristic,” which cannot be attributed to the environing-world.Footnote 58 Reality is the result of an operation of abstraction, through which “the meaningful is de-interpreted (ent-deutet) into this residue of being real.”Footnote 59 With reference to the phenomenological exercise mentioned above, Heidegger notes that “the question ‘is this lectern (as I experience it environmentally) real?’ is therefore a nonsensical question.”Footnote 60 For this reason, the problem of the reality of the external world is misleading.

Heidegger maintains that every thing is a thing of the world, in the sense that it is understandable only within the world and that it reveals the world in which it is located. In fact, he underlines that, living in an environing-world, “everything has the character of world. It is everywhere the case that ‘it worlds’ (es weltet).”Footnote 61 In this regard, the crucial point is that in environmental experience “the ‘it worlds’ is not established theoretically, but is experienced as ‘worlding’ (als weltend).”Footnote 62 Heidegger calls this experiential structure “event” (Ereignis), distinguishing it from the “process” (Vorgang), in which the relationship between the experiencing subject and the world is reduced to the cognitive relationship between subject and object. This relationship is based on a preliminary separation between subject and object, that is, on a “breach between experiencing and experienced.”Footnote 63 According to Heidegger, knowledge “is still only a rudiment of vital experience (Er-leben); it is a de-vivification (Ent-leben). What is objectified, what is known, is as such re-moved, lifted out of the actual experience.”Footnote 64

Furthermore, the knowing subject, that is, the “theoretical ‘I’” that, according to Husserl, is a “disinterested spectator,” is radically different from the “historical ‘I,’” which is involved in experience.Footnote 65 Here the emphasis Heidegger places on the historicity of the self fully emerges, contrary to what happens in Husserl’s conception, in which the subject is precisely a knowing subjet. Through knowledge, the historical “I” is “de-historicized,” i.e. reduced to a pure ego, understood as an identical pole of the acts.Footnote 66 As for the concept of givenness, Heidegger maintains that the environing-world is not something given, because “for something environmental to be given is already a theoretical infringement. It is already forcibly removed from me, from my historical ‘I’: the ‘it worlds’ is already no longer primary.”Footnote 67 The things of the world, like the lectern, are not given to the theoretical gaze, but encountered in their significance. Therefore, Heidegger concludes that “‘givenness’ (Gegebenheit) is already (…) a theoretical form.”Footnote 68

3 The many faces of the world and the historicity of life

In the lectures of the following years Heidegger progressively distinguishes his phenomenology from the Husserlian one, to the point of affirming that “we dispense with formal and transcendental considerations and start out from factical life (faktisches Leben).”Footnote 69 From this perspective, “factical life-experience is in the literal sense ‘worldly attuned,’ it always lives into a world, it always finds itself in a ‘lifeworld.’”Footnote 70 For this reason, Heidegger states that “our life is our world (…). And our life is only lived as life insofar as it lives in a world.”Footnote 71 It may seem obvious, but Heidegger intends to turn to it, so that this obviousness becomes absolutely problematic.

Starting from the lectures of 1919/1920 on the Basic Problems of Phenomenology, Heidegger analyzes the lifeworld by introducing a threefold distinction between “environing-world” (Umwelt), which is conceived as the environment wherein life takes place, “with-world” (Mitwelt), which is formed by the others with whom I am in relationship, and “self-world” (Selbstwelt), “in which I am involved and taken up in one way or another, in which something ‘happens’ to me, in which I am active,” and which “directly imparts upon my life this, my personal rhythm.”Footnote 72 The self-world must therefore be understood as the personal way in which everyone relates to the contents of their life. In particular, Heidegger notes that life “determines itself from out of a peculiar self-permeating of the environing-world, with-world, and self-world, not out of their mere aggregation. The relations of the self-permeating are absolutely of a non-theoretical, emotional kind. I am not the observer and least of all am I the theorizing knower of my self and of my life in the world.”Footnote 73 Hence, the phenomenologist is not the “disinterested spectator” of which Husserl speaks, but is always involved in the world. Life tends to happen in an unreflective way, but I can also meet myself in life, although most of the time I am blurred in the with-world.

In articulating the lifeworld, Heidegger will give an increasing methodological importance to the self-world. In fact, the “original region” of factical life is represented precisely by the self-world, which however is not immediately accessible to phenomenological investigation.Footnote 74 Heidegger speaks of “the intensifying-concentration (Zugespitzheit) of factical life upon the self-world,” which life can become aware of only by distancing itself from itself and from its tendency to understand itself on the basis of the environing-world and of others.Footnote 75 According to Heidegger, it is only thanks to Christianity that the lifeworld has historically progressively concentrated on the self-world, while Greek science was oriented towards natural reality: “The deepest historical paradigm for the peculiar process whereby the main focus of factical life and the lifeworld shifted into the self-world (…) gives itself to us in the emergence of Christianity. The self-world as such comes into life and is lived as such.”Footnote 76 This means that in the early Christian communities a radical change occurred in the orientation of life and in the directions in which it took place. In this regard, Heidegger also refers to Augustine, whose famous expression, crede, ut intelligas (believe, so that you may understand), is translated as “live your self vitally.”Footnote 77 However, Heidegger notes that the self-world does not usually stand out at all, since it appears completely determined by the contents of life, and thus it is absorbed in the with-world and in the significances of the environing-world.

The self-world has a specific “situational-character,” that is, it appears as the context in which I can find myself.Footnote 78 In this context, “having myself” is not the result of an act of self-reflection, but consists in “the process of life’s winning and losing a certain familiarity with itself.”Footnote 79 According to Heidegger, the “primal structure of the situation” consists of three fundamental components: “Content-sense” (Gehaltssinn), i.e. the content of experience; “relation-sense” (Bezugssinn), which indicates the way in which the self refers to this content; and “enactment-sense” (Vollzugssinn), which expresses the fulfillment of the self, that is, the performative aspect.Footnote 80 Heidegger explains that these three directions of sense “do not simply coexist. ‘Phenomenon’ is the totality of sense in these three directions. ‘Phenomenology’ is explication of this totality of sense; it gives the logos of the phenomena.”Footnote 81 The content-sense is represented by the world, while the relation-sense is not so much a form of theoretical knowledge, as a “caring (Sorgen).”Footnote 82 With regard to the enactment-sense, in the lectures of the 1920 summer semester Heidegger specifies that “the relation is had in the enactment,” i.e. in the fulfillment of the self.Footnote 83

From a methodological point of view, it is noteworthy that these concepts must be understood on the basis of the notion of “formal indication” (formale Anzeige). Heidegger introduces this notion in order to show that the concepts that phenomenology uses “are all still entirely formal, nothing prejudicing, only sounding a direction,” and therefore do not objectify what is manifested.Footnote 84 By means of the formal indication, “the relation and performance of the phenomenon is not preliminarily determined, but is held in abeyance,” so as not to subsume life and the world under objectifying categories.Footnote 85 The problem of the “philosophical concept formation” thus becomes central, precisely because Heidegger intends to develop a new (pre- or non-theoretical) conceptuality, which should be able to appropriately describe experience.Footnote 86

But the important point is that the Heideggerian concept of lifeworld is closely connected to the recognition of the immanent historicity of factical life.Footnote 87 Indeed, Heidegger’s understanding of the lifeworld radically differs from Husserl’s precisely in its emphasis on the historical nature of life itself. Heidegger subtracts the concept of history from its understanding in objective terms, which is proper to historiography, in order to inscribe it in the enactment of the lived experience. From this perspective, “the proper organon of understanding life is history, not as the science of history (…), but rather as lived life, how it goes along in living life.”Footnote 88 Referring to the proximity between the two terms, Heidegger understands history (Geschichte) as the occurring (Geschehen) of life, which in turn is strictly connected to enactment, since “enactment and enacting is an occurrence.”Footnote 89 Heidegger therefore expresses the radical historicity of the self by conceiving of history “as occurring in the event character of factical life related to factical self-world, with-world and environing-world.”Footnote 90

In the lectures of the 1920/1921 winter semester, dedicated to the analysis of the historical situation of the early Christian communities through the interpretation of Paul’s letters, Heidegger explicitly states that “factical life experience is historical” and that “Christian religiosity lives temporality as such.”Footnote 91 Here the historicity of life is strictly connected to temporality, understood not in a chronological sense but with reference to the enactment-sense. In fact, we have to make a “turn from the object-historical context to the enactment-historical situation.”Footnote 92 Heidegger argues that the crucial point is the context of enactment in which I actually find myself, in which life has the opportunity to contrast the tendency to lose itself in worldly significances.Footnote 93 The self is called to decide on its own life in every moment, and therefore every moment is decisive.Footnote 94 For Heidegger, life is characterized by constant insecurity, since the self has the chance to conquer but also to lose itself. Life can come to possess itself when it discovers the impossibility to enact itself as a given. In fact, life happens without ever exhausting itself in specific contents, and this is the meaning of its original historicity.

This historicity of life differs from that which Husserl attributes to the lifeword since the 1920s, which is conceived as a historical-cultural dimension. In fact, Husserl’s thesis is that historical and cultural productions, including scientific theories, are “sedimented” in the lifeworld.Footnote 95 Therefore, they too constitute the overall horizon of the experience.Footnote 96 In other words, human operations “flow into” the lifeworld, considered in its full concreteness.Footnote 97 In this way the concept of lifeworld expands, since it no longer refers only to the world of immediate experience, but also to the historical-cultural world, which becomes central in Krisis, although in this work the primacy of perception, and therefore the order of foundation based on it, is not at all questioned.Footnote 98 On the contrary, Heidegger maintains that historicity is immanent in life itself, as it is connected to the temporality of the self. As seen above, the self cannot be considered as a disinterested spectator, but rather as a historical “I,” which is not only situated in history, but is historical in itself.

In conclusion, in this paper I have shown that in the early Freiburg lecture courses of the years 1919 to 1923 Heidegger proposes a renewed conception of phenomenology through a comparison with Husserlian phenomenology, and specifically with the concept of lifeworld, which Husserl begins to deal with before 1920. Heidegger revisits the issue of the world by means of a critique of Husserl’s layered conception of experience, which is based on perception, arguing instead that experience is always an “environmental experience” and focusing on the “world-character” of life. In this context, the main point is that Heidegger’s rethinking of the concept of lifeworld is closely connected to the recognition of the immanent historicity of life. It is worth noting that this conception of historicity is quite different from that which Husserl developed since the ’20s, where historicity is understood as the historical and cultural dimension of the lifeworld. Heidegger’s historicity is instead immanent in life itself, since it refers to the temporality constitutive of experience.