Abstract
Chinese
philosophers, especially Mencius, Wang Yangming and his followers, the pursuit
of a "saint." This requires them to conduct a thorough awareness of
people's own reflection and fundamental change. They discover and explore some
special aspects of consciousness, Husserl's phenomenology of these areas have
not been taken into account, and thus made a thought-provoking
to the latter question. This paper explores three related issues: one, a person
or animal to its direct experience; Second, the moral sense and intention of
their own behavior and vivid experience of the direct relationship between
consciousness; Third, awareness of the intention to meditate on the silenced
of. Chinese philosophers, especially Mencius, Wang Yangming and Wang's
followers, pursue the way to become a "holy man", which requires a
thorough reflection on, and a radical change of one's own consciousness. Hence
they discover and investigate some special aspects of consciousness, which
haven't been taken into account by Husserlian Phenomenology, and therefore pose
revealing questions to the latter. This article discusses three of them: the
first question concerns a direct feeling for other human beings and animals;
the second question concerns the relation between the moral conscience and the
immediate consciousness of one's own intentional acts or lived-experiences; the
third question concerns the intentionality of the meditative, tranquil
consciousness.
https://philpapers.org/rec/KERTQF