Abstract

abstract:

This article formulates the "enigma of time" as the paradoxical compatibility between the apparent completeness of a temporal object's presence and the actual incompleteness of its manifestation. Proceeding with the methodological assumption that this paradox cannot be "solved" by positing an atemporal foundation (while compartmentalizing temporality to the extent that it becomes ontologically superfluous), I point to a constant risk in Husserl's transcendental phenomenology that the temporality of temporal phenomena is traced to an atemporal activity arranging equally atemporal contents—and thereby is explained away rather than explained. The risk was already recognizable in the "schematic model" of apprehension, and it persisted in the foundationalist interpretation of "absolute time-consciousness." By contrast, I suggest a hermeneutics that takes time seriously, which comprehends the paradox and make it the productive core of philosophizing. Only in this way can time cease to be a petrifying impasse and instead redefine the landscape of philosophy.

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