Volume 19, Number 3, 247-266, DOI: 10.1007/BF00144021

Between the subject and sociology: Alfred Schutz's phenomenology of the life-world

Timothy M. Costelloe

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Abstract

In his writings Alfred Schutz identifies an artificiality in the concept of ldquolife-worldrdquo produced by Edmund Husserl's method of reduction. As an alternative, he proposes to assume intersubjectivity as a given of everyday life. This eradicates Husserl's distinction between ldquolife-worldrdquo and ldquonatural attitude.rdquo The subsequent phenomenological project appears to center upon sociological descriptions of the ldquostructures of the life-worldrdquo rather than on a search for apodictic truth. Schutz, however, actually retains Husserl's emphasis on the subject. A tension then arises between the assumption of intersubjectivity and individual experience. Rather than clarifying the concept of intersubjectivity, this further problematizes it. Drawing upon Max Weber's work, Schutz responds by developing a rigorous methodology for studying the social world. But having rejected Husserl's reduction and conflated ldquolife-worldrdquo and ldquonatural attitude,rdquo Schutz's analysis moves at the level of daily life itself. Consequently, the explanatory categories he proposes appear as abstractions rather than as a way of describing lived experience. Schutz, it is concluded, initiates a scientistic sociology in which the commonsense structures of the ldquonatural attitude of everyday liferdquo are subverted and replaced by the more rigorous knowledge of the ldquoscientific attitude.rdquo Schutz's version of phenomenology is ultimately untrue to the spirit of Husserl's original project; and deploying his work as a clear-cut alternative to scientistic tendencies within sociology is not as straightforward as it might at first seem.

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