Abstract
Edmund Husserl’s Kaizo articles mark one of his first attempts
at notions of cultural renewal and critique. (1) Central to both of
these notions for Husserl is the idea of a best possible
humanity. At the conclusion of the Kaizo articles, Husserl
entertains some quite troubling and potentially dangerous
descriptions of the best possible in terms of an Übernation or
Weltvolk. Although merely provisional, these descriptions call
for a cultural and ethical renewal through the reorientation of
humanity in accord with a single, unified “world.”
The Kaizo articles do represent Husserl’s most concentrated
effort in developing a notion of cultural renewal but are not the
only attempt made by Husserl at this time. In manuscripts
written at nearly the exact same time period, Husserl had also
taken up this notion of the best possible, but he did so in terms
of the shared experiences in the acts of sympathy. (2) These
sympathy manuscripts offer a genetic description of the origins
of the best possible, in contrast to the static, eidetic method
Husserl employed in the Kaizo articles. My aim in this paper is
to show that a genetic phenomenological approach, grounding
the best possible in the lived experiences of sympathy, offers a
much more concrete telos for humanity. Solidarity among all
human beings, rather than the idea of a “super nation,” would
function as the best possible, as what we should and, thus, can
become. Although certain shortcomings remain in the sympathy
manuscripts, they indicate a much better beginning for a
phenomenological approach to the question of a cultural
renewal, a beginning that first emerges in genesis and the lived
experience of the suffering of a fellow human being.