Introduction to Husserlian Phenomenology

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Northwestern University Press, Apr 29, 1993 - Philosophy - 269 pages
This comprehensive study of Husserl's phenomenology concentrates on Husserl's emphasis on the theory of knowledge. The authors develop a synthetic overview of phenomenology and its relation to logic, mathematics, the natural and human sciences, and philosophy. The result is an example of philology at its best, avoiding technical language and making Husserl's thought accessible to a variety of readers.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Mathematics Logic and Phenomenology
13
2 The Methodical Founding of Phenomenology as the Science of Pure Transcendental Consciousness
58
3 The Universal Structures of Consciousness in the Phenomenological Sense
88
4 Perception Thing and Space
115
5 The Phenomenology of Intuitional Presentiation
141
6 Judgement and Truth
166
7 Static and Genetic Constitution
195
8 The I and the Person
205
9 The Lifeworld Both as a Problem Concerning the Foundation of the Objective Sciences and as a Problem Concerning Universal Being and Truth
217
10 First and Second Philosophy or Transcendental Phenomenology and Metaphysics
229
Appendix
235
Notes
251
Bibliography
267
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