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The actuality of states and other social groups

Tomoo Otaka's transcendental project?

Genki Uemura, Toru Yaegashi

pp. 349-379

The aim of the present chapter is to bring to light and assess discussions of social reality proposed by a Japanese student of Husserl, Tomoo Otaka (1899–1956). What is most remarkable about Otaka in this regard is the fact that he conceives himself as a follower of Husserl's transcendental phenomenology. This makes him unique among early phenomenologists of sociality, as most of his phenomenological contemporaries dealt with so-called social ontological problems in a realist-ontological manner. Consequently, the following question guides the present paper: How and to what extent can Otaka's discussions of social reality be integrated into Husserl's project of transcendental phenomenology? Drawing mainly on his German and Japanese writings from the 1930s, we show not only that Otaka appropriates Husserl's idea of constitutive analysis but also that he attempts to expand it; he applies Husserl's scheme of constitutive analysis to actually existing states, such as Japan, and other social groups. At the same time, we point out that Otaka's work faces a dilemma. On the one hand, if he sticks to the project of constitutive analysis, his account of the actuality of social groups is implausible, because it relies on the problematic idea that we can have supersensible intuition of those groups. On the other hand, if he removes the implausible portion of his analysis, it would make his position non-phenomenological according to his own Husserlian standards. This dilemma, we further argue, could have been avoided, if he adopts an alternative, but still Husserlian scheme of constitutive analysis.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-27692-2_15

Full citation:

Uemura, G. , Yaegashi, T. (2016)., The actuality of states and other social groups: Tomoo Otaka's transcendental project?, in A. Salice & H. B. Schmid (eds.), The phenomenological approach to social reality, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 349-379.

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