Essence in Recent Philosophy: Husserl, Whitehead, Santayana

Philosophy Today 18 (3):198-210 (1974)
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Abstract

A comparative study to determine the significance of essence in the doctrine of three philosophers. By his method of reduction husserl disclosed his version of essence and used it to establish phenomenology as a rigorous science and to see phenomena solely as phenomena. Whitehead identified essence with his "eternal objects" and this identification protected his "actual occasions" from the limitations of empiricism. By means of essence seen exclusively as appearance and relations, Santayana supports his ingenious thesis that nothing given exists. Conclusion: essence is a cardinal element in the philosophy of all three men

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