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Implication, transduction
Author:
ISBN: 2717832386 Year: 1997 Publisher: Paris : Anthropos,

Content and object : Husserl, Twardowski and psychologism
Author:
ISBN: 079234734X 9048149053 9401711607 9780792347347 Year: 1997 Volume: 142 Publisher: Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers,

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Abstract

This study is a revised version ofa book, published in February 1990 under the same title, as my Ph.D. thesis at the University of Stockholm. Revision of an earlier work poses specific problems, some of which deserve mentioning. After the appearance of the first version of this book new literature on related subjects and a new version of the principal HusserI text involved in the discussion have appeared. The newer literature contains both accounts of Twardowski's thought and its relations to HusserI's philosophy, though without referring to my study from 1990, largely because the texts concerned were con­ ceived parallell to it, though published later, or independently of it. It would seem anachronistic, in this situation, to enter into new and ex­ tensive discussions with the authors of this literature. The choice made here has been to update the original study, adding references to texts published after my study, and to take account of points of views expressed. I have retained the major part of the basic information giv­ en in the 1990 version, although some of it might now be more famil­ iar to interested students than it was in 1990.

Thing and space : lectures of 1907
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0792347498 9780792347491 Year: 1997 Volume: 7 Publisher: Dordrecht: Kluwer,

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This is a translation of Edmund HusserI's lecture course from the Summer semester 1907 at the University of Gottingen. The German original was pub­ lished posthumously in 1973 as Volume XVI of Husserliana, Husserl's opera omnia. The translation is complete, including both the main text and the supplementary texts (as Husserliana volumes are usually organized), except for the critical apparatus which provides variant readings. The announced title of the lecture course was "Main parts of the phenome­ nology and critique of reason." The course began with five, relatively inde­ pendent, introductory lectures. These were published on their own in 1947, bearing the title The idea ojphenomenology.l The "Five Lectures" comprise a general orientation by proposing the method to be employed in the subsequent working out of the actual problems (viz., the method of "phenomenological reduction") and by clarifying, at least provisionally, some technical terms that will be used in the labor the subsequent lectures will carry out. The present volume, then, presents that labor, i.e., the method in action and the results attained. As such, this text dispels the abstract impression which could not help but cling to the first five lectures taken in isolation. Accord­ ingly, we are here given genuine "introductory lectures," i.e., an introduction to phenomenology in the genuine phenomenological sense of engaging in the work of phenomenology, going to the "matters at issue themselves," rather than remaining aloof from them in abstract considerations of standpoint and approach.

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