Page:Avenarius and the Standpoint of Pure Experience.djvu/67

Rh He who feels this attitude longs for the existential judgment. His mood is not satisfied with science as now defined; description is not enough, and he demands the explanation of experience. The experience which is to be explained is the experience with some of whose aspects we became acquainted in the first section of this paper. It is experience characterized by the outer world and the fellow man as transcendent objects,—in a word, by the natural view of the world.