Phenomenology of Consciousness in Ādi Śamkara and Edmund Husserl

Original Articles

Phenomenology of Consciousness in Ādi Śamkara and Edmund Husserl

Published in: Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology
Volume 9 , issue 1 , 2009 , pages: 1–12
DOI: 10.1080/20797222.2009.11433987

Abstract

The philosophical investigation of consciousness has a long-standing history in both Indian and Western thought. The conceptual models and analyses that have emerged in one cultural framework may be profitably reviewed in the light of another. In this context, a study of the notion of consciousness in the transcendental phenomenology of Edmund Husserl is not only important as a focus on a remarkable achievement in the context of Western thought, but is also useful for an appreciation of the concern with this question in the Indian philosophical tradition, and especially in the tradition of Advaita Vedānta of Ādi Śamkara. The starting point for this paper is the belief that phenomenology has a recognizably common face for both these traditions.

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