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Franz Brentano

Franz Clemens Honoratus Hermann Josef Brentano (/brɛnˈtɑːn/; German: [bʁɛnˈtaːno]; 16 January 1838 – 17 March 1917) was a German philosopher and psychologist. His 1874 Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint, considered his magnum opus, is credited with having reintroduced the medieval scholastic concept of intentionality into contemporary philosophy.


Franz Brentano
Born
Franz Clemens Honoratus Hermann Josef Brentano

16 January 1838
Marienberg am Rhein [de],
Rhineland, Prussia, German Confederation
Died17 March 1917 (1917-03-18) (aged 79)
EducationUniversity of Munich
University of Berlin
University of Münster
University of Tübingen
(PhD, 1862)
University of Würzburg
(Dr. phil. hab., 1866)
Spouses
  • Ida Lieben
    (m. 1880–1894; her death)
  • Emilie Rueprecht
    (m. 1897–1917; his death)
Era19th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolSchool of Brentano
Aristotelianism
Intentionalism ("act psychology")[1]
Empirical psychology[2]
Austrian phenomenology[3]
Austrian realism[4][5]
InstitutionsUniversity of Würzburg
(1866–1873)
University of Vienna
(1873–1895)
Theses
  • Von der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles (On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle) (1862)
  • Die Psychologie des Aristoteles, insbesondere seine Lehre vom Nous Poietikos (The Psychology of Aristotle, in Particular His Doctrine of the Active Intellect) (1867)
Doctoral advisorFranz Jakob Clemens
(PhD thesis advisor)
Other academic advisorsAdolf Trendelenburg
Notable studentsEdmund Husserl, Sigmund Freud, Tomáš Masaryk, Rudolf Steiner, Alexius Meinong, Carl Stumpf, Anton Marty, Kazimierz Twardowski, Christian von Ehrenfels
Main interests
Ontology
Psychology
Notable ideas
Influences
Ecclesiastical career
ChurchCatholic Church
Ordained6 August 1864
Laicized1873

Originally a Catholic priest, Brentano withdrew from the priesthood in 1873 due to the dogmatic definition of papal infallibility in Pastor aeternus. Working subsequently as a non-denominational professor, his teaching triggered research in a wide array of fields such as linguistics, logic, mathematics and experimental psychology through the young generation of philosophers who were gathered as the School of Brentano.

Life

Brentano was born at Marienberg am Rhein [de], near Boppard. He was son of Christian Brentano, brother of Lujo Brentano, and paternal nephew of Clemens Brentano and Bettina von Arnim, and of Gunda (née Brentano) and Friedrich von Savigny. He studied philosophy at the universities of Munich, Würzburg, Berlin (with Adolf Trendelenburg) and Münster. He had a special interest in Aristotle and scholastic philosophy. He wrote his dissertation in 1862 at Tübingen under the title Von der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles (On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle). His thesis advisor was Franz Jakob Clemens.[14] Subsequently, he began to study theology and entered the seminary in Munich and then Würzburg. He was ordained a Catholic priest on 6 August 1864.

In 1866 he defended his habilitation thesis, Die Psychologie des Aristoteles, insbesondere seine Lehre vom Nous Poietikos (The Psychology of Aristotle, in Particular His Doctrine of the Active Intellect, published 1867), and began to lecture at the University of Würzburg. His students in this period included, among others, Carl Stumpf and Anton Marty. Between 1870 and 1873, Brentano was heavily involved in the debate on papal infallibility in matters of Faith. A strong opponent of such dogma, he eventually gave up his priesthood and his tenure in 1873. He remained, however, deeply religious[15] and dealt with the topic of the existence of God in lectures given at the Universities of Würzburg and Vienna.[16]

In 1874 Brentano published his major work, Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint. From 1874 to 1895 he taught at the University of Vienna, Austria-Hungary. Among his students were Edmund Husserl, Sigmund Freud, Tomáš Masaryk, Rudolf Steiner, Alexius Meinong, Carl Stumpf, Anton Marty, Kazimierz Twardowski, and Christian von Ehrenfels and many others (see School of Brentano for more details). While he began his career as a full ordinary professor, he was forced to give up both his Austrian citizenship and his professorship in 1880 in order to marry Ida Lieben (Austro-Hungarian law denied matrimony to persons who had been ordained priests even if they later had resigned from priesthood), but he was permitted to stay at the university only as a Privatdozent. After the departure of Twardowski back to Lwów and the death of his wife in 1894, Brentano retired and moved to Florence in 1896, where he married his second wife, Emilie Ruprecht, in 1897. He transferred to Zürich at the outbreak of the First World War, where he died in 1917.

Work

Intentionality

Brentano is best known for his reintroduction of the concept of intentionality—a concept derived from scholastic philosophy—to contemporary philosophy in his lectures and in his work Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt (Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint). While often simplistically summarised as "aboutness" or the relationship between mental acts and the external world, Brentano defined it as the main characteristic of mental phenomena, by which they could be distinguished from physical phenomena. Every mental phenomenon, every psychological act has content, is directed at an object (the intentional object). Every belief, desire etc. has an object that they are about: the believed, the desired. Brentano used the expression "intentional inexistence" to indicate the status of the objects of thought in the mind. The property of being intentional, of having an intentional object, was the key feature to distinguish psychological phenomena and physical phenomena, because, as Brentano defined it, physical phenomena lacked the ability to generate original intentionality, and could only facilitate an intentional relationship in a second-hand manner, which he labeled derived intentionality.

Every mental phenomenon is characterized by what the Scholastics of the Middle Ages called the intentional (or mental) inexistence of an object, and what we might call, though not wholly unambiguously, reference to a content, direction towards an object (which is not to be understood here as meaning a thing), or immanent objectivity. Every mental phenomenon includes something as object within itself, although they do not all do so in the same way. In presentation something is presented, in judgement something is affirmed or denied, in love loved, in hate hated, in desire desired and so on. This intentional in-existence is characteristic exclusively of mental phenomena. No physical phenomenon exhibits anything like it. We could, therefore, define mental phenomena by saying that they are those phenomena which contain an object intentionally within themselves. — Franz Brentano, Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint, edited by Linda L. McAlister (London: Routledge, 1995 [1874]), pp. 88–89.

Brentano introduced a distinction between genetic psychology (genetische Psychologie) and descriptive psychology (beschreibende or deskriptive Psychologie):[17] in his terminology, genetic psychology is the study of psychological phenomena from a third-person point of view, which involves the use of empirical experiments (satisfying, thus, the scientific standards we nowadays expect of an empirical science).[6] (This concept is roughly equivalent to what is now called empirical psychology,[18] cognitive science,[18] or "heterophenomenology", an explicitly third-person, scientific approach to the study of consciousness.) The aim of descriptive psychology, on the other hand, is to describe consciousness from a first-person point of view.[6] The latter approach was further developed by Husserl and the phenomenological tradition.[19]

Theory of perception

He is also well known for claiming that Wahrnehmung ist Falschnehmung ('perception is misconception') that is to say perception is erroneous. In fact he maintained that external, sensory perception could not tell us anything about the de facto existence of the perceived world, which could simply be illusion. However, we can be absolutely sure of our internal perception. When I hear a tone, I cannot be completely sure that there is a tone in the real world, but I am absolutely certain that I do hear. This awareness, of the fact that I hear, is called internal perception. External perception, sensory perception, can only yield hypotheses about the perceived world, but not truth. Hence he and many of his pupils (in particular Carl Stumpf and Edmund Husserl) thought that the natural sciences could only yield hypotheses and never universal, absolute truths as in pure logic or mathematics.

However, in a reprinting of his Psychologie vom Empirischen Standpunkte (Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint), he recanted this previous view. He attempted to do so without reworking the previous arguments within that work but it has been said that he was wholly unsuccessful. The new view states that when we hear a sound, we hear something from the external world; there are no physical phenomena of internal perception.[20]

Theory of judgment

Brentano has a theory of judgment which is different from what is currently the predominant (Fregean) view. At the centre of Brentano's theory of judgment lies the idea that a judgment depends on having a presentation, but this presentation does not have to be predicated. Even stronger: Brentano thought that predication is not even necessary for judgment, because there are judgments without a predicational content. Another fundamental aspect of his theory is that judgments are always existential. This so-called existential claim implies that when someone is judging that S is P he/she is judging that some S that is P exists. (Note that Brentano denied the idea that all judgments are of the form: S is P [and all other kinds of judgment which combine presentations]. Brentano argued that there are also judgments arising from a single presentation, e.g. “the planet Mars exists” has only one presentation.) In Brentano's own symbols, a judgment is always of the form: ‘+A’ (A exists) or ‘–A’ (A does not exist).

Combined with the third fundamental claim of Brentano, the idea that all judgments are either positive (judging that A exists) or negative (judging that A does not exist), we have a complete picture of Brentano's theory of judgment. So, imagine that you doubt whether midgets exist. At that point you have a presentation of midgets in your mind. When you judge that midgets do not exist, then you are judging that the presentation you have does not present something that exists. You do not have to utter that in words or otherwise predicate that judgment. The whole judgment takes place in the denial (or approval) of the existence of the presentation you have.

The problem of Brentano's theory of judgment is not the idea that all judgments are existential judgments (though it is sometimes a very complex enterprise to transform an ordinary judgment into an existential one), the real problem is that Brentano made no distinction between object and presentation. A presentation exists as an object in your mind. So you cannot really judge that A does not exist, because if you do so you also judge that the presentation is not there (which is impossible, according to Brentano's idea that all judgments have the object which is judged as presentation). Kazimierz Twardowski acknowledged this problem and solved it by denying that the object is equal to the presentation. This is actually only a change within Brentano's theory of perception, but has a welcome consequence for the theory of judgment, viz. that you can have a presentation (which exists) but at the same time judge that the object does not exist.

Legacy

The young Martin Heidegger was very much inspired by Brentano's early work On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle. Brentano's focus on conscious (or phenomenal) intentionality was inherited by Carl Stumpf's Berlin School of experimental psychology, Anton Marty's Prague School of linguistics, Alexius Meinong's Graz School of experimental psychology, Kazimierz Twardowski's Lwów School of philosophy, and Edmund Husserl's phenomenology.[21] Brentano's work also influenced George Stout,[13] the teacher of G. E. Moore and Bertrand Russell at Cambridge University.[22]

Bibliography

Major works by Brentano in German
  • (1862) On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle (Von der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles (doctoral thesis)) ()
  • (1867) The Psychology of Aristotle (Die Psychologie des Aristoteles, insbesondere seine Lehre vom Nous Poietikos (habilitation thesis written in 1865/66)) (online)
  • (1874) Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint (Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt) (Online)
    • (1924–25) Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt. Ed. Oskar Kraus, 2 vols. Leipzig: Meiner. ISBN 3-7873-0014-7[23]
  • (1876) Was für ein Philosoph manchmal Epoche macht (a work against Plotinus) (Online)
  • (1889) The Origin of our Knowledge of Right and Wrong (Vom Ursprung sittlicher Erkenntnis) (1902 English edition online)
  • (1911) Aristotle and his World View (Aristoteles und seine Weltanschauung)
  • (1911) The Classification of Mental Phenomena (Von der Klassifikation der psychischen Phänomene)
  • (1930) The True and the Evident (Wahrheit und Evidenz)
  • (1976) Philosophical Investigations on Space, Time and Phenomena (Philosophische Untersuchungen zu Raum, Zeit und Kontinuum)
  • (1982) Descriptive Psychology (Deskriptive Psychologie)
Collected Works
  • Sämtliche veröffentlichte Schriften in zehn Bänden (Collected Works in Ten Volumes, edited by Arkadiusz Chrudzimski and Thomas Binder), Frankfurt: Ontos Verlag (now Walter de Gruyter).
    • 1. Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkte — Von der Klassifikation der psychischen Phänomene (2008)
    • 2. Untersuchungen zur Sinnespsychologie (2009)
    • 3. Schriften zur Ethik und Ästhetik (2010)
    • 4. Von der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles (2014)

See also

References

  1. ^ Franz Brentano – Britannica.com
  2. ^ E. B. Titchener, "Brentano and Wundt: Empirical and Experimental Psychology", The American Journal of Psychology, 32(1) (Jan. 1921), pp. 108–120.
  3. ^ Robin D. Rollinger, Austrian Phenomenology: Brentano, Husserl, Meinong, and Others on Mind and Object, Walter de Gruyter, 2008, p. 7.
  4. ^ Gestalt Theory: Official Journal of the Society for Gestalt Theory and Its Applications (GTA), 22, Steinkopff, 2000, p. 94: "Attention has varied between Continental Phenomenology (late Husserl, Merleau-Ponty) and Austrian Realism (Brentano, Meinong, Benussi, early Husserl)".
  5. ^ Robin D. Rollinger, Austrian Phenomenology: Brentano, Husserl, Meinong, and Others on Mind and Object, Walter de Gruyter, 2008, p. 114: "The fact that Brentano [in Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint] speaks of a relation of analogy between physical phenomena and real things existing outside of the mind obviously indicates that he is a realist and not an idealist or a solipsist, as he may indeed be taken to at first glance. Rather, his position is a very extreme representational realism. The things which exist outside of our sensations, he maintains, are in fact to be identified with the ones we find posited in the hypotheses of natural sciences."
  6. ^ a b c d Huemer, Wolfgang. "Franz Brentano". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  7. ^ Brentano, F., Sensory and Noetic Consciousness: Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint III, International Library of Philosophy and Scientific Method, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981.
  8. ^ Biagio G. Tassone, From Psychology to Phenomenology: Franz Brentano's 'Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint' and Contemporary Philosophy of Mind, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, p. 307.
  9. ^ Franz Brentano: Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt. Ed. Oskar Kraus, 2 vols. Leipzig: Meiner, 1924–25; ed. Mauro Antonelli. Heusenstamm: Ontos, 2008
  10. ^ Robin D. Rollinger, Husserl's Position in the School of Brentano, Phaenomenologica 150, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1999, Chap. 2: "Husserl and Bolzano", p. 70.
  11. ^ Edoardo Fugali, Toward the Rebirth of Aristotelian Psychology: Trendelenburg and Brentano (2008).
  12. ^ Barry Smith, "Aristotle, Menger, Mises:An Essay in the Metaphysics of Economics", History of Political Economy, Annual Supplement to vol. 22 (1990), 263–288.
  13. ^ a b Liliana Albertazzi, Immanent Realism: An Introduction to Brentano, Springer, 2006, p. 321.
  14. ^ Franz Brentano at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  15. ^ Boltzmann, Ludwig. 1995. Ludwig Boltzmann: His Later Life and Philosophy, 1900-1906: Book Two: The Philosopher. Springer Science & Business Media, p. 3
  16. ^ Brentano, F. C. 1987. On the Existence of God: Lectures Given at the Universities of Würzburg and Vienna (1868-1891). Springer Science & Business Media,
  17. ^ The first published occurrence of the term is in Brentano's Vom Ursprung sittlicher Erkenntnis (The Origin of our Knowledge of Right and Wrong) published in 1889 (see Franz Brentano, Descriptive Psychology, Routledge, 2012, "Introduction").
  18. ^ a b Dale Jacquette (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Brentano, Cambridge University Press, 2004, p. 67.
  19. ^ Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, Phenomenology World-Wide: Foundations — Expanding Dynamics — Life-Engagements A Guide for Research and Study, Springer, 2014, p. 18: "[Husserl] entrusts this analysis to a pure or phenomenological psychology whose links with Brentano's descriptive psychology are still clearly visible."
  20. ^ See Postfix in the 1923 edition (in German) or the 1973, English version (ISBN 0710074255, edited by Oskar Kraus; translated [from German] by Antos C. Rancurello, D. B. Terrell and Linda López McAlister; English edition edited by Linda López McAlister).
  21. ^ Uriah Kriegel, "Phenomenal intentionality past and present: introductory, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 12(3):437–444 (2013).
  22. ^ Maria van der Schaar, G. F. Stout and the Psychological Origins of Analytic Philosophy, Springer, 2013, p. viii.
  23. ^ Franz Brentano Archiv Graz

External links

franz, brentano, franz, clemens, honoratus, hermann, josef, brentano, ɑː, german, bʁɛnˈtaːno, january, 1838, march, 1917, german, philosopher, psychologist, 1874, psychology, from, empirical, standpoint, considered, magnum, opus, credited, with, having, reintr. Franz Clemens Honoratus Hermann Josef Brentano b r ɛ n ˈ t ɑː n oʊ German bʁɛnˈtaːno 16 January 1838 17 March 1917 was a German philosopher and psychologist His 1874 Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint considered his magnum opus is credited with having reintroduced the medieval scholastic concept of intentionality into contemporary philosophy The ReverendFranz BrentanoBornFranz Clemens Honoratus Hermann Josef Brentano16 January 1838Marienberg am Rhein de Rhineland Prussia German ConfederationDied17 March 1917 1917 03 18 aged 79 Zurich SwitzerlandEducationUniversity of MunichUniversity of BerlinUniversity of MunsterUniversity of Tubingen PhD 1862 University of Wurzburg Dr phil hab 1866 SpousesIda Lieben m 1880 1894 her death Emilie Rueprecht m 1897 1917 his death Era19th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolSchool of BrentanoAristotelianismIntentionalism act psychology 1 Empirical psychology 2 Austrian phenomenology 3 Austrian realism 4 5 InstitutionsUniversity of Wurzburg 1866 1873 University of Vienna 1873 1895 ThesesVon der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle 1862 Die Psychologie des Aristoteles insbesondere seine Lehre vom Nous Poietikos The Psychology of Aristotle in Particular His Doctrine of the Active Intellect 1867 Doctoral advisorFranz Jakob Clemens PhD thesis advisor Other academic advisorsAdolf TrendelenburgNotable studentsEdmund Husserl Sigmund Freud Tomas Masaryk Rudolf Steiner Alexius Meinong Carl Stumpf Anton Marty Kazimierz Twardowski Christian von EhrenfelsMain interestsOntologyPsychologyNotable ideasIntentionality Intentional object Distinction between genetic and empirical descriptive psychology 6 Distinction between sensory and noetic consciousness presentations of sensory objects or intuitions versus thinking of concepts 7 8 Judgement Predication distinction Time consciousness 6 Influences Aristotle Aquinas Mill 9 Bolzano 10 Trendelenburg 11 Influenced Edmund Husserl Sigmund Freud Tomas Garrigue Masaryk Rudolf Steiner Alexius Meinong Carl Stumpf Anton Marty Kazimierz Twardowski Christian von Ehrenfels Vittorio Benussi Carl Menger 12 Martin Heidegger George Stout 13 Ecclesiastical careerChurchCatholic ChurchOrdained6 August 1864Laicized1873Originally a Catholic priest Brentano withdrew from the priesthood in 1873 due to the dogmatic definition of papal infallibility in Pastor aeternus Working subsequently as a non denominational professor his teaching triggered research in a wide array of fields such as linguistics logic mathematics and experimental psychology through the young generation of philosophers who were gathered as the School of Brentano Contents 1 Life 2 Work 2 1 Intentionality 2 2 Theory of perception 2 3 Theory of judgment 3 Legacy 4 Bibliography 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksLife EditBrentano was born at Marienberg am Rhein de near Boppard He was son of Christian Brentano brother of Lujo Brentano and paternal nephew of Clemens Brentano and Bettina von Arnim and of Gunda nee Brentano and Friedrich von Savigny He studied philosophy at the universities of Munich Wurzburg Berlin with Adolf Trendelenburg and Munster He had a special interest in Aristotle and scholastic philosophy He wrote his dissertation in 1862 at Tubingen under the title Von der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle His thesis advisor was Franz Jakob Clemens 14 Subsequently he began to study theology and entered the seminary in Munich and then Wurzburg He was ordained a Catholic priest on 6 August 1864 In 1866 he defended his habilitation thesis Die Psychologie des Aristoteles insbesondere seine Lehre vom Nous Poietikos The Psychology of Aristotle in Particular His Doctrine of the Active Intellect published 1867 and began to lecture at the University of Wurzburg His students in this period included among others Carl Stumpf and Anton Marty Between 1870 and 1873 Brentano was heavily involved in the debate on papal infallibility in matters of Faith A strong opponent of such dogma he eventually gave up his priesthood and his tenure in 1873 He remained however deeply religious 15 and dealt with the topic of the existence of God in lectures given at the Universities of Wurzburg and Vienna 16 In 1874 Brentano published his major work Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint From 1874 to 1895 he taught at the University of Vienna Austria Hungary Among his students were Edmund Husserl Sigmund Freud Tomas Masaryk Rudolf Steiner Alexius Meinong Carl Stumpf Anton Marty Kazimierz Twardowski and Christian von Ehrenfels and many others see School of Brentano for more details While he began his career as a full ordinary professor he was forced to give up both his Austrian citizenship and his professorship in 1880 in order to marry Ida Lieben Austro Hungarian law denied matrimony to persons who had been ordained priests even if they later had resigned from priesthood but he was permitted to stay at the university only as a Privatdozent After the departure of Twardowski back to Lwow and the death of his wife in 1894 Brentano retired and moved to Florence in 1896 where he married his second wife Emilie Ruprecht in 1897 He transferred to Zurich at the outbreak of the First World War where he died in 1917 Work EditIntentionality Edit Main article Intentionality Brentano is best known for his reintroduction of the concept of intentionality a concept derived from scholastic philosophy to contemporary philosophy in his lectures and in his work Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint While often simplistically summarised as aboutness or the relationship between mental acts and the external world Brentano defined it as the main characteristic of mental phenomena by which they could be distinguished from physical phenomena Every mental phenomenon every psychological act has content is directed at an object the intentional object Every belief desire etc has an object that they are about the believed the desired Brentano used the expression intentional inexistence to indicate the status of the objects of thought in the mind The property of being intentional of having an intentional object was the key feature to distinguish psychological phenomena and physical phenomena because as Brentano defined it physical phenomena lacked the ability to generate original intentionality and could only facilitate an intentional relationship in a second hand manner which he labeled derived intentionality Every mental phenomenon is characterized by what the Scholastics of the Middle Ages called the intentional or mental inexistence of an object and what we might call though not wholly unambiguously reference to a content direction towards an object which is not to be understood here as meaning a thing or immanent objectivity Every mental phenomenon includes something as object within itself although they do not all do so in the same way In presentation something is presented in judgement something is affirmed or denied in love loved in hate hated in desire desired and so on This intentional in existence is characteristic exclusively of mental phenomena No physical phenomenon exhibits anything like it We could therefore define mental phenomena by saying that they are those phenomena which contain an object intentionally within themselves Franz Brentano Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint edited by Linda L McAlister London Routledge 1995 1874 pp 88 89 Brentano introduced a distinction between genetic psychology genetische Psychologie and descriptive psychology beschreibende or deskriptive Psychologie 17 in his terminology genetic psychology is the study of psychological phenomena from a third person point of view which involves the use of empirical experiments satisfying thus the scientific standards we nowadays expect of an empirical science 6 This concept is roughly equivalent to what is now called empirical psychology 18 cognitive science 18 or heterophenomenology an explicitly third person scientific approach to the study of consciousness The aim of descriptive psychology on the other hand is to describe consciousness from a first person point of view 6 The latter approach was further developed by Husserl and the phenomenological tradition 19 Theory of perception Edit He is also well known for claiming that Wahrnehmung ist Falschnehmung perception is misconception that is to say perception is erroneous In fact he maintained that external sensory perception could not tell us anything about the de facto existence of the perceived world which could simply be illusion However we can be absolutely sure of our internal perception When I hear a tone I cannot be completely sure that there is a tone in the real world but I am absolutely certain that I do hear This awareness of the fact that I hear is called internal perception External perception sensory perception can only yield hypotheses about the perceived world but not truth Hence he and many of his pupils in particular Carl Stumpf and Edmund Husserl thought that the natural sciences could only yield hypotheses and never universal absolute truths as in pure logic or mathematics However in a reprinting of his Psychologie vom Empirischen Standpunkte Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint he recanted this previous view He attempted to do so without reworking the previous arguments within that work but it has been said that he was wholly unsuccessful The new view states that when we hear a sound we hear something from the external world there are no physical phenomena of internal perception 20 Theory of judgment Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Brentano has a theory of judgment which is different from what is currently the predominant Fregean view At the centre of Brentano s theory of judgment lies the idea that a judgment depends on having a presentation but this presentation does not have to be predicated Even stronger Brentano thought that predication is not even necessary for judgment because there are judgments without a predicational content Another fundamental aspect of his theory is that judgments are always existential This so called existential claim implies that when someone is judging that S is P he she is judging that some S that is P exists Note that Brentano denied the idea that all judgments are of the form S is P and all other kinds of judgment which combine presentations Brentano argued that there are also judgments arising from a single presentation e g the planet Mars exists has only one presentation In Brentano s own symbols a judgment is always of the form A A exists or A A does not exist Combined with the third fundamental claim of Brentano the idea that all judgments are either positive judging that A exists or negative judging that A does not exist we have a complete picture of Brentano s theory of judgment So imagine that you doubt whether midgets exist At that point you have a presentation of midgets in your mind When you judge that midgets do not exist then you are judging that the presentation you have does not present something that exists You do not have to utter that in words or otherwise predicate that judgment The whole judgment takes place in the denial or approval of the existence of the presentation you have The problem of Brentano s theory of judgment is not the idea that all judgments are existential judgments though it is sometimes a very complex enterprise to transform an ordinary judgment into an existential one the real problem is that Brentano made no distinction between object and presentation A presentation exists as an object in your mind So you cannot really judge that A does not exist because if you do so you also judge that the presentation is not there which is impossible according to Brentano s idea that all judgments have the object which is judged as presentation Kazimierz Twardowski acknowledged this problem and solved it by denying that the object is equal to the presentation This is actually only a change within Brentano s theory of perception but has a welcome consequence for the theory of judgment viz that you can have a presentation which exists but at the same time judge that the object does not exist Legacy EditThe young Martin Heidegger was very much inspired by Brentano s early work On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle Brentano s focus on conscious or phenomenal intentionality was inherited by Carl Stumpf s Berlin School of experimental psychology Anton Marty s Prague School of linguistics Alexius Meinong s Graz School of experimental psychology Kazimierz Twardowski s Lwow School of philosophy and Edmund Husserl s phenomenology 21 Brentano s work also influenced George Stout 13 the teacher of G E Moore and Bertrand Russell at Cambridge University 22 Bibliography EditMajor works by Brentano in German 1862 On the Several Senses of Being in Aristotle Von der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles doctoral thesis online 1867 The Psychology of Aristotle Die Psychologie des Aristoteles insbesondere seine Lehre vom Nous Poietikos habilitation thesis written in 1865 66 online 1874 Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt Online 1924 25 Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt Ed Oskar Kraus 2 vols Leipzig Meiner ISBN 3 7873 0014 7 23 1876 Was fur ein Philosoph manchmal Epoche macht a work against Plotinus Online 1889 The Origin of our Knowledge of Right and Wrong Vom Ursprung sittlicher Erkenntnis 1902 English edition online 1911 Aristotle and his World View Aristoteles und seine Weltanschauung 1911 The Classification of Mental Phenomena Von der Klassifikation der psychischen Phanomene 1930 The True and the Evident Wahrheit und Evidenz 1976 Philosophical Investigations on Space Time and Phenomena Philosophische Untersuchungen zu Raum Zeit und Kontinuum 1982 Descriptive Psychology Deskriptive Psychologie Collected WorksSamtliche veroffentlichte Schriften in zehn Banden Collected Works in Ten Volumes edited by Arkadiusz Chrudzimski and Thomas Binder Frankfurt Ontos Verlag now Walter de Gruyter 1 Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkte Von der Klassifikation der psychischen Phanomene 2008 2 Untersuchungen zur Sinnespsychologie 2009 3 Schriften zur Ethik und Asthetik 2010 4 Von der mannigfachen Bedeutung des Seienden nach Aristoteles 2014 See also EditAnalytic psychology Dilthey Analytic psychology Stout Axiological ethics Anna von Lieben his sister in law Robert von Lieben his nephew List of Austrian scientists List of AustriansReferences Edit Franz Brentano Britannica com E B Titchener Brentano and Wundt Empirical and Experimental Psychology The American Journal of Psychology 32 1 Jan 1921 pp 108 120 Robin D Rollinger Austrian Phenomenology Brentano Husserl Meinong and Others on Mind and Object Walter de Gruyter 2008 p 7 Gestalt Theory Official Journal of the Society for Gestalt Theory and Its Applications GTA 22 Steinkopff 2000 p 94 Attention has varied between Continental Phenomenology late Husserl Merleau Ponty and Austrian Realism Brentano Meinong Benussi early Husserl Robin D Rollinger Austrian Phenomenology Brentano Husserl Meinong and Others on Mind and Object Walter de Gruyter 2008 p 114 The fact that Brentano in Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint speaks of a relation of analogy between physical phenomena and real things existing outside of the mind obviously indicates that he is a realist and not an idealist or a solipsist as he may indeed be taken to at first glance Rather his position is a very extreme representational realism The things which exist outside of our sensations he maintains are in fact to be identified with the ones we find posited in the hypotheses of natural sciences a b c d Huemer Wolfgang Franz Brentano In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Brentano F Sensory and Noetic Consciousness Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint III International Library of Philosophy and Scientific Method Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1981 Biagio G Tassone From Psychology to Phenomenology Franz Brentano s Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint and Contemporary Philosophy of Mind Palgrave Macmillan 2012 p 307 Franz Brentano Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt Ed Oskar Kraus 2 vols Leipzig Meiner 1924 25 ed Mauro Antonelli Heusenstamm Ontos 2008 Robin D Rollinger Husserl s Position in the School of Brentano Phaenomenologica 150 Dordrecht Kluwer 1999 Chap 2 Husserl and Bolzano p 70 Edoardo Fugali Toward the Rebirth of Aristotelian Psychology Trendelenburg and Brentano 2008 Barry Smith Aristotle Menger Mises An Essay in the Metaphysics of Economics History of Political Economy Annual Supplement to vol 22 1990 263 288 a b Liliana Albertazzi Immanent Realism An Introduction to Brentano Springer 2006 p 321 Franz Brentano at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Boltzmann Ludwig 1995 Ludwig Boltzmann His Later Life and Philosophy 1900 1906 Book Two The Philosopher Springer Science amp Business Media p 3 Brentano F C 1987 On the Existence of God Lectures Given at the Universities of Wurzburg and Vienna 1868 1891 Springer Science amp Business Media The first published occurrence of the term is in Brentano s Vom Ursprung sittlicher Erkenntnis The Origin of our Knowledge of Right and Wrong published in 1889 see Franz Brentano Descriptive Psychology Routledge 2012 Introduction a b Dale Jacquette ed The Cambridge Companion to Brentano Cambridge University Press 2004 p 67 Anna Teresa Tymieniecka Phenomenology World Wide Foundations Expanding Dynamics Life Engagements A Guide for Research and Study Springer 2014 p 18 Husserl entrusts this analysis to a pure or phenomenological psychology whose links with Brentano s descriptive psychology are still clearly visible See Postfix in the 1923 edition in German or the 1973 English version ISBN 0710074255 edited by Oskar Kraus translated from German by Antos C Rancurello D B Terrell and Linda Lopez McAlister English edition edited by Linda Lopez McAlister Uriah Kriegel Phenomenal intentionality past and present introductory Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 12 3 437 444 2013 Maria van der Schaar G F Stout and the Psychological Origins of Analytic Philosophy Springer 2013 p viii Franz Brentano Archiv GrazExternal links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Franz Brentano Wikimedia Commons has media related to Franz Brentano https www brentanoandthearistoteliantradition org https www facebook com groups 5864284163632311 Franz Brentano website Franz Brentano and Cornelio Fabro A forgotten chapter of the Brentanian reception Archived 2016 03 24 at the Wayback Machine Huemer Wolfgang Franz Brentano In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Brandl Johannes Brentano s Theory of Judgement In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Franz Brentano s Ontology and His Immanent Realism Contains a list of the English translations of Brentano s works Brentano Franz New International Encyclopedia 1905 Works by or about Franz Brentano at Internet Archive The Origin of the Knowledge of Right and Wrong by Franz Brentano at Project Gutenberg Franz Brentano Archiv Franz Brentano Papers at Graz University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franz Brentano amp oldid 1144721651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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