Abstract
With the possible exception of the first volume of the Ideas, no single
work published by Husserl has caused as much controversy among
philosophers otherwise sympathetic to his philosophical endeavor as the
5th Cartesian Meditation. The controversy centers around the constitutive
analysis of the sense "another subject," an analysis the elaborate
detail of which seems out of place in the otherwise programmatic
Cartesian Meditations. This analysis, which marks the first step in
Husserl's account of consciousness of the other as another subject,
consciousness of self as a subject among other subjects, and consciousness
of the world as an Objective 1 world, a world shared by a plurality
of different subjects, is regarded to be a test of the philosophical status
of transcendental phenomenology as such, a test Husserl seems to have
failed.
The present essay will examine this constitutive analysis as well as
the role it plays in the argument of the 5th Meditation. As the title
suggests, I shall side with Husserl's critics in that the analysis will be
found to be wanting. However, the essay will not be simply critical, nor
will it be a review of the various criticisms and defenses of the 5th
Meditation which have appeared in the phenomenological tradition.
Rather, an attempt to rethink the problem of intersubjectivity, the title
that will be adopted for the problems posed by meanings founded upon
the sense "another subject," will be made, and, in light of this attempt,
a new approach to the constitutive analysis of the sense "another subject"
will be presented.
The specific thesis of this essay, viz., that a new approach to the constitutive
analysis of the experience of the other as another subject is
required, one different from Husserl's approach in the 5th Meditation, is based upon the rejection of Husserl's position that consciousness of
the other as another subject is originally founded upon a connection
made by the I between the other qua phenomenal object and itself qua
phenomenal object, a connection that makes the extension of mental
predicates to the other possible. The question I shall pose is this: Is the
proper locus for the constitutive analysis of the sense "another subject,"
the analysis of the various motives and resulting intentional
accomplishments in virtue of which the other presents himself as another
subject, the distinction made on the level of the fully constituted,
intersubjective world between the "privacy" of mental life and the
"publicness" of the body? It will be argued that the attribution of
mental life to the other (and to the I, for that matter) has the status of
an explanation for observed phenomena the basis for the recognition of
which is intersubjective (e.g., conflicts between subjects regarding their
opinions of an Object, the difference between the behavior of subjects
vis-a-vis that of inanimate objects, etc.), and hence that the distinction
between "mind" and "body" cannot guide the analysis of the intentional
situation that motivates the distinction.