ONTOLOGY OF THE WILL — GEIGER, PFÄNDER, HUSSERL
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
A phenomenological approach to the ontology of the will could be rendered along three positions:
Firstly, the willing I is completely immanent in its experience, such that one can only will, and know
that one wills, by reflecting on the actual experience of willing. Secondly, one could hold that the
will, while being analyzable as a conscious phenomenon, is itself a real psychic force driving one’s
motivations and actions without one necessarily being aware of it. The third position would argue
that the reality of the will is not exhausted by the way it is experienced, but that its real causes are not
necessarily part of a complete phenomenological investigation. I discuss the phenomenology of the
will of Alexander Pfänder, Moritz Geiger and Edmund Husserl along this realist-transcendentalist
spectrum. My basic concern here is a critical examination of the phenomenological approach to an
entity beyond experience which is responsible for the experienced volitions. I will proceed in three
steps, based on the distinction of volitions into three parts. Firstly, I ask what antecedes a volition in
order to determine its phenomenal and ontological causes. Secondly, the analysis of the apperception
of willing clarifies in what sense an “I” is experienced as the real or phenomenal cause of its volition.
Thirdly, the discussion of the realization of the volition will address the role that this “I” subsequently
plays in the process of fulfilling its intent. The paper develops the ways in which the ontology
of the “willing I” limits and shapes the conception of the intentional relation between willing and
desiring consciousness and its contents.
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NEUMANN D. ONTOLOGY OF THE WILL — GEIGER, PFANDER, HUSSERL. Horizon. Studies in Phenomenology, 2022, vol. 11 issue 2, pp. 495–516.