Obras complétas, vol. 8, 273; henceforth cited by volume numbers). In 1948 Ortega believes that this purpose, as he accomplishes it, entails setting phenomenology aside. But as Fernando Vela reminds us with reference to Ortega's journey to Argentina in 1928, in those years Ortega's purpose was to "provide the connection of a system to the intuitive dispersion of phenomenology" (1953, 187). Be that as it may, up to 1929 Ortega does not make his criticisms of phenomenology publicly known, and his important lectures—later a book—on "What Is Philosophy?" follow the track of a most rigorous phenomenology. It should not be forgotten that the most important of Ortega's books, The Revolt of the Masses, was written in close connection with those lectures, and that they both have a common source, precisely in the years in which Ortega is attempting to provide a system for phenomenology. This is the background against which the phenomenological nature of Ortega's ethics must be considered, as this character is fundamental for subsequent ethics—at least in the points that will be discussed. Since some basic features of José Aranguren's ethics depend on Ortega, there could be a great deal of phenomenology at the basis of elaborations that get their inspiration from this source." /> Spain and Latin america - Javier San Martín; Roberto Walton; | sdvig press

Spain and Latin america

Javier San Martín, Roberto Walton

pp. 555-576


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