ABSTRACT

Abstract: e aim of this article is to situate positively Husserl’s philosophy with respect to current discussions concerning the mind-body problem and, more specically, the so-called “hard problem” of consciousness. It will be rst argued that the view according to which phenomenology can contribute to the solution of the hard problem by being naturalized and incorporated into cognitive sciences is based on a misunderstanding of the nature and aim of Husserl’s philosophy. Subsequently, it will be shown that phenomenology deals with the issue of the relation between mind and body in the framework of the transcendental foundation of the ontology of animal nature, and provides thereby a non-reductionist solution to the hard problem. is discussion will at the same time stress the sharp dierences existing between phenomenology and philosophy of mind, and highlight the relation between phenomenology and ontology.