Cartesian Meditations
Méditations cartésiennes: introduction à la phénoménologie — Husserl's late introduction to transcendental phenomenology
Tradition: Transcendental phenomenology
Husserl rereads Descartes as the inaugurator of phenomenology — the transcendental ego, intersubjectivity, and the constitution of the world
The Cartesian Meditations are Husserl's most accessible statement of his mature transcendental phenomenology. Based on lectures Husserl gave at the Sorbonne in 1929 (and later expanded for publication), the five meditations follow the structure of Descartes's six: the methodological starting point in the cogito (Meditation I), the field of transcendental experience (II), the constitution of objects (III), the constitution of the transcendental ego (IV), and — Husserl's decisive innovation — the constitution of intersubjectivity, the experience of the other and the objective world it grounds (V). The work was Husserl's principal late attempt to address the charge of solipsism and remains the standard introductory text in the phenomenological tradition.
Author
Editions cited
- Cartesian Meditations: An Introduction to Phenomenology (Dorion Cairns, Nijhoff/Springer, 1960)
- The Essential Husserl (Donn Welton, Indiana, 1999, with selections)
School Embodiments
The Cartesian Meditations are the most programmatically transcendental of Husserl's mature works and the principal late statement of the phenomenological method.
"Phenomenology is, as it were, the secret longing of all modern philosophy." (Cartesian Meditations, Introduction §2)
Husserl explicitly identifies phenomenology with the Cartesian project of beginning philosophy on apodictically certain foundations — a transformation rather than abandonment of the rationalist project.
"By means of the cogito, I exist purely as ego, with the universal life that is my own." (Cartesian Meditations II §13)
Husserl's transcendental idealism (especially in Meditation IV) reads the world as constituted in and for transcendental subjectivity. The position is recognisably post-Kantian, though Husserl distinguishes it sharply from Berkeleyan and Hegelian idealism.
"The objective world derives its whole sense and its existential status... from me myself, from me as the transcendental ego." (Cartesian Meditations IV §41)
Husserl's phenomenology is transcendental in the Kantian sense — concerned with the conditions of possibility of experience, not with empirical psychology. Heidegger, Sartre, and the entire phenomenological tradition inherit this register.
"Phenomenology must, in a peculiar new sense, be called a transcendental philosophy." (Cartesian Meditations, Introduction §3)
Sartre and Merleau-Ponty read Cartesian Meditations as their starting point in their own phenomenological work — even when they ultimately rejected Husserl's transcendental-egological frame.
"The objective world that exists for me, that always has and always will exist for me, the only world that ever can exist for me — this world... derives its whole sense from me." (Cartesian Meditations IV §40)
Internal Tensions
The Cartesian Meditations have been read in opposite directions since 1931. Heidegger and the Marburg phenomenologists rejected the transcendental-egological frame as a misreading of phenomenology's genuine possibility. Merleau-Ponty took the embodied direction. The "transcendental" Husserl of the Meditations vs the "life-world" Husserl of the late Crisis (1936) is contested in the secondary literature, with most contemporary phenomenologists treating the move toward the life-world as a deepening rather than abandonment of the transcendental project.
I. Time
Husserl's phenomenology of inner time-consciousness (developed more fully in the 1905 lectures) treats time as constituted by the transcendental ego's retention-impression-protention structure. Time is real for ordinary experience but transcendentally constituted — emergent in Husserl's precise phenomenological sense.
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II. Space
Like time, space is treated as constituted by the transcendental ego's perceptual activity. Spatial objects are given perspectivally — what Husserl analyses as the constitution of "the same" thing across changing aspects.
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III. Matter
Material objects are intentional correlates of consciousness — what Husserl calls "noemata." Matter is real in the sense that the consciousness of material objects is irreducible, but its philosophical status is relational rather than substantival.
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IV. Observer
The Husserlian observer is the transcendental ego — singular at the transcendental level (each ego is the absolute viewpoint of its own world), plural at the empirical level (intersubjectivity is constituted in Meditation V). Active, embodied at the empirical level, disembodied at the transcendental. Moral authority is reason; metaphysical agency is None at the level of the working phenomenology.
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V. Energy
Not theorised. Standard background.
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VI. Information
Sense (Sinn) is the substantival informational structure of conscious experience. Personal information is not conserved across death — Husserl does not address the question philosophically.
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How Cartesian Meditations resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 32 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.