Goethe’s Phenomenological Way of Thinking and the Urphänomen
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 May 2021
Summary
Das Höchste wäre, zu begreifen, daß alles Factische schon Theorie ist. Die Bläue des Himmels offenbart uns das Grundgesetz der Chromatik. Man suche nur nichts hinter den Phänomenen; sie selbst sind die Lehre. (FA 1.13:49)
[The ultimate goal would be: to grasp that everything in the realm of fact is already theory. The blue of the sky reveals to us the basic law of chromatics. Let us not seek for something behind the phenomena—they themselves are the theory.]
Der Mensch kennt nur sich selbst, insofern er die Welt kennt, die er nur in sich und sich nur in ihr gewahr wird. Jeder neue Gegenstand, wohl beschaut, schließt ein neues Organ in uns auf. (FA 1.24:596)
[The human being knows himself only insofar as he knows the world; he perceives the world only in himself, and himself only in the world. Every new object, well contemplated and clearly seen, opens up a new organ within us. (39)]
THESE TWO MAXIMS SUGGEST that Goethe's thinking about and intuition of the world are phenomenologically grounded. They can be read as programmatic statements for his specific kind of phenomenological thinking, evident in his poetry and his natural science and philosophical writings. I suggest reading the first aphorism in the light of the phenomenological shibboleth “Back to the things themselves” (Zurück zu den Sachen selbst), pronounced by Edmund Husserl, the founder of the phenomenological movement. Similarly, the second aphorism reflects the phenomenological intertwinement of subject and object; it shows how each new experience might widen the faculties of perception, cognition, and intuition and thus suggests that the observer undergoes perpetual metamorphosis in response to each new object of perception and cognition.
As I will show, reading Goethe's method—his way of perceiving, experiencing, and reflecting—as grounded in and guided by what Husserl calls the “principle of all principles,” that is, pure and “original intuition,” allows new insights into Goethe's works. Hence, I propose a phenomenological reading of Goethe, especially of his philosophical and scientific writings. Husserl's philosophical language and phenomenological method, oriented toward clarity and truth, help to illuminate Goethe's phenomenological thinking and to transform implicit into explicit philosophical concepts.
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- Goethe Yearbook 22 , pp. 143 - 168Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015