Lagayscienza wroteScience doesn't talk about its own presuppositions. There is physics in knitting, but the latter really says nothing at all about physics and doesn't belong in a conversational setting like this. Note how science is silent on metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, and anything they do say is vacuous.
Hereandnow, can I ask how a phenomenological investigation of religion would differ from an investigation of religion by modern science? If such investigations would not be similar in their methods, would they both still be valid attempts to understand the reality of religion? Are there different ways of understanding religion? This strikes me as an important question if we are to arrive at an understanding the phenomenon of religion.
Would it be true to say that an understanding of religion by science and by phenomenology would yield different results? Or would you deny that science can have anything to say about religion?
Phenomenology begins with the presuppositions of physics.
Here is the way Husserl begins his introductory remarks for his Ideas I:
Pure Phenomenology, to which we are here seeking the way, whose unique position in regard to all other sciences we wish to make clear, and to set forth as the most fundamental region of philosophy, is an essentially new science, which in virtue of its own governing peculiarity lies far removed from our ordinary thinking, and has not until our own day therefore shown an impulse to develop..... to reach the phenomenological standpoint, and through reflexion to fix its distinctive character, and that also of the natural viewpoints, in a scientific way, this is the first and by no means easy task which we must carry out in full, if we would gain the ground of phenomenology and grasp its distinctive nature scientifically.......
Here is a taste of how phenomenological thinking begins to proceed:
I can let my attention wander from the writing-table I have just seen and observed, through the unseen portions of the room behind my back to the verandah, into the garden, to the children in the summer-house, and so forth, to all the objects concerning which I precisely “know” that they are there and yonder in my immediate co-perceived surroundings—a knowledge which has nothing of conceptual thinking in it, and first changes into clear intuiting with the bestowing of attention, and even then only partially and for the most part very imperfectly.
If you have ever come across Proust's Search of Time Lost, you may find something similar, for he is considered a phenomenological writer. Notice that attention is on the immediacy of the perceptual environment, the givenness, if you will, of the things around one. A bit further on, and this is a notable passage from Ideas I:
What is actually perceived, and what is more or less clearly co-present and determinate (to some extent at least), is partly pervaded, partly girt about with a dimly apprehended depth or fringe of indeterminate reality. I can pierce it with rays from the illuminating focus of attention with varying success. Determining representations, dim at first, then livelier, fetch me something out, a chain of such recollections takes shape, the circle of determinacy extends ever farther, and eventually so far that the connexion with the actual field of perception as the immediate environment is established. But in general the issue is a different one : an empty mist of dim indeterminacy gets studded over with intuitive possibilities or presumptions, and only the “form” of the world as “world” is foretokened. Moreover, the zone of indeterminacy is infinite. The misty horizon that can never be completely outlined remains necessarily there. As it is with the world in its ordered being as a spatial present —the aspect I have so far been considering—so likewise is it with the world in respect to its ordered being in the succession of time. This world now present to me, and in every waking ‘now’ obviously so, has its temporal horizon, infinite in both directions, its known and unknown, its intimately alive and its unalive past and future. Moving freely within the moment of experience which brings what is present into my intuitional grasp, I can follow up these connexions of the reality which immediately surrounds me. I can shift my standpoint in space and time, look this way and that, turn temporally forwards and backwards; I can provide for myself constantly new and more or less clear and meaningful perceptions and representations, and images also more or less clear, in which I make intuitable to myself whatever can possibly exist really or supposedly in the steadfast order of space and time. In this way, when consciously awake, I find myself at all times, and without my ever being able to change this, set in relation to a world which, through its constant changes, remains one and ever the same. It is continually “present” for me, and I myself am a member of it. Therefore this world is not there for me as a mere world of facts and affairs, but, with the same immediacy, as a world of values, a world of goods, a practical world. Without further effort on my part I find the things before me furnished not only with the qualities that befit their positive nature, but with value-characters such as beautiful or ugly, agreeable or disagreeable, pleasant or unpleasant, and so forth. Things in their immediacy stand there as objects to be used, the “table” with its “books”, the “glass to drink from”, the “vase”, the “piano”, and so forth. These values and practicalities, they too belong to the constitution of the “actually present” objects....
A bit lengthy, but it I think one has to see how this kind of thinking begins to take up the world. See how I underlined that last sentence: the pragmatics, the feelings, the aesthetics, all seen by science as irrelevant, now take up their rightful place in the analysis of existence. One is not applying evolving historical paradigms that comprise the foundation of discovery. Rather, one begins at the beginning: in the structures of the world as it is encountered. Space is not defined through an Einsteinian mathematical equation, for prior to arriving at something like this, one has to first BE in a world that always already there from which science makes its measurements and comparisons and various quantifications. The familiar sciences presuppose the bear givenness of a world. Phenomenology wants to "observe" just this world, the presupposed space and time and structure of what we talk about and engage every day. The above sounds a little too loosely conceived to be a "science" but this is because it is merely an intro. Husserl is looking for a "method that promises to lead to genuine knowing."
It helps to read Kant first, for Kant's Copernican Revolution, as he calls it, puts perception itself IN the object that is known and this is a fundamental step, for ontology and epistemology are bound to the same essence, that is, they are the same thing: to know X is part and parcel of X itself. Recent talk in quantum mechanics has made similar statements, that is, about when the perceptual apparatus reaches out to grasp an object, what is produced is a synthesis. But all one has to do is ask that fateful question about this basic epistemology and the jig is up: I, as a perceiver, am not a "mirror" of a world. Speaking in plain physicalist terms, a brain is about as opaque as a thing can be. Thus, this coffee cup's most basic analysis simply cannot be the way physicists talk about it.