Home > Work > Experience and Judgment
1 " Every experience has its own horizon; every experiencehas its core of actual and determinate cognition, its own content of immediate determinations which give themselves;but beyond this core of determinate quiddity, of the truly given as "itself here," it has its own horizon. This implies that every experience refers to the possibility. . . of obtaining, little by little as experiencecontinues, new determinations of the same thing. . . And this horizon in its indeterminateness is copresentfrom the beginning as a realm (Spielraum) of possibilities, as the prescription of the path to a moreprecise determination, in which only experience itself decides in favor of the determinate possibility itrealizes as opposed to others. [Edmund Husserl, Experience and Judgment, trans. James Spencer Churchill and Karl Ameriks (Evanston: NorthwesternUniversity Press, 1973), p. 32.] "
― Edmund Husserl , Experience and Judgment