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    Husserl's transcendental subject is not the Cartesian cog... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Husserl's phenomenology does not successfully carry out the Kantian project of synthesizing man as object and subject by grounding knowledge in a pure transcendental subject.

    Husserl's transcendental subject is not the Cartesian cogito but the modern cogito, which already includes the empirical unthought.

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    It might seem that Husserl’s phenomenology has carried out the Kantian project of synthesizing man as object and as subject by radicalizing the Cartesian project; that is, by grounding our knowledge of empirical truths in the transcendental subject. The problem, however, is that, as Foucault sees it, the modern notion of man excludes Descartes’ idea of the cogito as a “sovereign transparency” of pure consciousness. Foucault’s key claim in the dense chapter 9, “Man and his doubles,” is that thoug

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