Abstract
In Husserl’s Account of our Consciousness of Time, James Mensch brings extensive
research to his explication of Husserl’s phenomenology of inner time-consciousness
and provides an original interpretation of Husserl’s position. The text begins with a
review of several philosophers of time who influenced Husserl: Aristotle,
Augustine, Kant, James, and Brentano. With these sections, Mensch sets up his
own analysis of Husserl’s phenomenology of time. He then works through Husserl’s
descriptions of our experience of time, addressing retention and protention, the ego,
consciousness, intersubjectivity, affectivity, the instincts, and the body. Mensch
identifies an ‘‘aporia’’ in Husserl’s work on time, such that ‘‘time-constituting
phenomena’’, i.e., retention and protention, are described on the one hand as
timeless and pre-individual, and on the other hand (in various manuscripts) as
associated with the instincts and drives. He then suggests, as a conclusion to his
work, that the body is the source of retention and protention, and thus of
temporality.