Almost every individual desire to comprehend the world, provoking theories of various kinds to help make sense of it, because many aspects of the world defy easy explanation. However, some individual are likely to cease their effort at some point and to content themselves with whatever understanding they achieved, but no with Edmund Husserl. The paper aims to come up a clear and striking epistemological assessment of Edmund Husserl's “phenomenological epoché” which lay genius integration of traditional ideas from Aristotle, Descartes and Hume with new ideas, to a more sophisticated of mind and consciousness derived from Brentano, which gives way to a new horizon of understanding man not merely as thinking subject but the acting, feeling, living individual condition of existence. The author solely concern's phenomenological epoché; suspension of all natural belief in the objects of experience where every method is taken by itself and investigated by the method that would mo...