In the article “Remarks on the concepts of epochē and reduction in phenomenology” the author would like to draw readers’ attention to a fundamental issue of phenomenology: the relationship between epochē and reduction. These two concepts play a key role in both classical and modern phenomenology. In fact, the history of phenomenology can be viewed from the perspective of the evolution of these concepts, starting with Husserl and continuing through J. Patočka and R. Ingarden, all the way to their contemporary versions provided by the new phenomenologists, such as M. Henry and R. Barbaras. The author tries to trace some of this history and of the debates between the different representatives of phenomenology. The aim is twofold: on the one hand, to explain the meaning and role played by these two concepts, and, on the other, to show how their application is related to the development of phenomenology itself, from Husserl to the present day.
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