000 01487cam a2200157 4500500
005 20250112042200.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aWorms, Frédéric
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aIntelligence, Won by Intuition?
260 _c2001.
500 _a30
520 _aThe purpose of this paper is to show how Bergson’s reading of Kant, far from leading to brief watchword, implies a partial re-appropriation, a precise critique, and a final objection that together lead to the heart of a profound relationship between two irreducible philosophies. The partial endorsement of Kant’s distinction between intelligence and intuition, and even between matter and form of intuition itself, must only be understood as an ironic homage. It helps in the understanding of the unity Bergson advocates against Kant, first between the matter and form of intuition, in terms of time, then between intuition and intelligence itself, from L’évolution créatrice. That unity helps to understand why intelligence is seen apart from practical intuition in Bergson’s last great book. Intelligence or understanding is thus “won” in a double way; not only as surpassed, but also as penetrated by intuition, up to a last limit, revealing a peculiar difference, at the heart of a common problem.
786 0 _nLes Études philosophiques | o 59 | 4 | 2001-12-01 | p. 453-464 | 0014-2166
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-les-etudes-philosophiques-2001-4-page-453?lang=en
999 _c182425
_d182425