Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

Index

  • Burt C. Hopkins
Weitere Titel anzeigen von McGill-Queen's University Press
The Philosophy of Husserl
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch The Philosophy of Husserl
© McGill-Queen's University Press

© McGill-Queen's University Press

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Acknowledgements ix
  4. Abbreviations xi
  5. Prolegomenon: Husserl's turn to history and pure phenomenology 1
  6. Plato's and Aristotle's theory of eidē
  7. Plato's Socratic theory of eidē: the first pillar of the ancient precedent to pure phenomenology 21
  8. Pluto's arithmological theory of eidē: the second pillar of the ancient precedent to pure phenomenology 34
  9. Aristotle's criticism of Plato's theory of eidē: the third (and final) pillar of the ancient precedent to pure phenomenology 60
  10. From descriptive psychology to transcendentally pure phenomenology
  11. Origin of the task of pure phenomenology 83
  12. Pure phenomenology and Platonism 96
  13. Pure phenomenology as the transcendental-phenomenological investigation of absolute consciousness 110
  14. Transcendental phenomenology of absolute consciousness and phenomenological philosophy 125
  15. Limits of the transcendental-phenomenological investigation of pure consciousness 139
  16. From the phenomenology of transcendental consciousness to that of monadological intersubjectivity
  17. Phenomenological philosophy as transcendental idealism 148
  18. The intersubiective foundation of transcendental idealism: the immanent transcendency of the world's obiectivity 156
  19. From monadological intersubjectivity to the historical a priori constitutive of all meaning
  20. The pure phenomenological motivation of Husserl's turn to history 174
  21. The essential connection between intentional history and actual history 181
  22. The historicity of both the intelligibility of ideal meanings and the possibility of actual history 187
  23. Desedimentation and the link between intentional history and the constitution of a historical tradition 192
  24. Transcendental phenomenology as the only true explanation of objectivity and all meaningful problems in previous philosophy 204
  25. The unwarranted historical presuppositions guiding the fundamental ontological and deconstructive criticisms of transcendental philosophy
  26. The methodological presupposition of the ontico-ontological critique of intentionality: Plato's Socratic seeing of the eidē 216
  27. The mereological presupposition of fundamental ontology: that Being as a whole has a meaning overall 232
  28. The presupposition behind the proto-deconstructive critique of intentional historicity: the conflation of intrasu biective and intersu biective idealities 246
  29. The presupposition behind the deconstruction of phenomenology: the subordination of being to speech 254
  30. Epilogue: Transcendental-phenomenological criticism of the criticism of phenomenological cognition 264
  31. Coda: Phenomenological self-responsi bility and the singularity of transcendental philosophy 273
  32. Notes 275
  33. Bibliograpb y 283
  34. Index 287
Heruntergeladen am 20.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780773594807-027/html
Button zum nach oben scrollen