Edmund Husserl

Edmund Husserl is named as a philosopher from Laterre, the world known on Arbre as Antarct. He is referenced in conversation by the Laterran linguist Jules Verne Durand, who explains that a tale about “Saunt Atamant” and a copper bowl was loosely based on Husserl and the copper ashtray Husserl kept on his desk.

Context and Role in Current Events

  • Reference purpose: The "Saunt Atamant" story—especially the claim that a scratch in the bowl was made to disappear—was presented as a deliberate fiction to provoke clear statements about whether anyone on Arbre wields powers associated with the Incanter legend.
  • Provenance of the account: This attribution comes from Jules Verne Durand after revealing his identity and mission; it situates Husserl as an intellectual touchstone from Laterre, used to craft a plausible-seeming, introspection-centered narrative for Arbran audiences.

Nature of the Reference

  • Discipline and association: Identified as a philosopher; no specific school or treatise is provided in current accounts beyond the copper‑object motif.
  • Status on Arbre: Husserl does not appear in person; he is known only by this mention as an extracosmic thinker whose name and desk item inspired a fictionalized example.

Notes

  • The claim that the bowl’s scratch “disappeared” was part of the ruse and is not presented as an actual feat; it served to test reactions and beliefs, not to document an event.
Summary:

Edmund Husserl is a philosopher from Laterre (known on Arbre as Antarct). A Laterran visitor cited him—and a copper ashtray on his desk—as the inspiration for a fictional "Saunt Atamant" narrative used to test whether Arbrans possessed powers associated with the Incanter legend.

Known as:
Edmund Husserl