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EN
This article is based on two main concepts of hermeneutic experience (Dilthey's and Heidegger's approaches). The issues discussed concern, among other things, the question of relation between the experiencing subject's attitude and the content being experienced. The latter (objective importance) is rendered discernible from the objective content. In effect, the intentionality-based hermeneutic concept of experience reveals its basic feature: not only is daily experience independent as to content from a physical description of presence of a real object, but moreover, it constitutes the condition for soundness of the same.
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2007
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vol. 16
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issue 1(61)
265-280
EN
The point of departure in the paper is the problem of Heidegger's anti-logic claims. The author undertakes a short analysis of position taken by Heidegger in the context of the problem of relation between logic and experience. When Heidegger uncovers originality of temporality, he shows the pre-conceptual origins of possible human experience and begins to undermind the dominance of logic. The resulting 'onto-logy'' the author tries to compare with Kant's transcendental philosophy as interpreted by Heidegger. Methodical function of ontology stressed in the paper makes it possible to understand Heidegger's hermeneutic phenomenology as a discipline that is concerned with the formal meaning of 'phenomenon'.
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