rapprochement, yet it is equally beyond question that Henry himself would not have welcomed this possibility.1 In the construction of his own theory of life, it has always been against Bergson that he has pursued this enterprise, whether in his earliest works or his last ones. In Philosophy and Phenomenology of the Body (published in French in 1963), Henry writes that the interior life analyzed by him and Maine de Biran has nothing to do with Bergson.2 Likewise, the Bergsonian unconscious is a crude idea when compared to a proper Biranian understanding of memory as potential, "capable of being produced by a power that can produce them' (EM 62). Even further, claims Henry, if Maine de Biran must be separated from Bergson's vitalism, then he is best seen as a true founder of phenomenology, like Descartes and Husserl, rather than at the head of a French tradition leading to Bergson (EM 8–9)." /> The psycho-physics of phenomenology - Mullarkey John | sdvig press

The psycho-physics of phenomenology

Bergson and Henry

John Mullarkey

pp. 201-220


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