| Preface | p. ix |
| Acknowledgments | p. xiii |
| List of Abbreviations | p. xv |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Edmund Husserl: A Biographical Sketch | p. 1 |
| The Husserl Archives | p. 5 |
| Periodizations of Husserl's Development | p. 7 |
| Outline of Husserl's Phenomenology | p. 9 |
| Introduction to the Encyclopaedia Article | p. 28 |
| Text | p. 28 |
| Synopsis | p. 30 |
| Commentary | p. 32 |
| The Origin of Husserl's Phenomenology | p. 32 |
| Phenomenology as Descriptive Psychology: Husserl's Original View | p. 39 |
| Phenomenological Psychology | p. 47 |
| Pure Science of Nature and Pure Psychology | p. 48 |
| Text | p. 48 |
| Synopsis | p. 50 |
| Commentary | p. 51 |
| The Genesis of the Idea of Phenomenological Psychology | p. 51 |
| Husserl's View on Empirical Psychology: "Eidetic Psychology" | p. 52 |
| Husserl's View on Empirical and Eidetic Sciences | p. 56 |
| Fact and Essence | p. 57 |
| Regional Ontologies and Phenomenology | p. 62 |
| Empirical Psychology, Pure Psychology, and Psychophysiology | p. 68 |
| The Purely Psychical as Given in Experience: Intentionality | p. 74 |
| Text | p. 74 |
| Synopsis | p. 80 |
| Commentary | p. 82 |
| Experience, Intuition, Evidence | p. 82 |
| Experience of the Purely Psychical | p. 88 |
| Intentionality | p. 91 |
| Intentionality in Logical Investigations | p. 92 |
| Intentionality in the Later Works | p. 94 |
| Static Description of Intentionality | p. 96 |
| Dynamic Description of Intentionality | p. 101 |
| Intentional Analysis | p. 104 |
| The Field of the Purely Psychical, the Phenomenological Reduction, and Genuine Inner Experience | p. 110 |
| Text | p. 110 |
| Synopsis | p. 116 |
| Commentary | p. 118 |
| Phenomenological Reduction | p. 118 |
| Necessity of the Phenomenological Reduction | p. 118 |
| Description of the Phenomenological Reduction | p. 120 |
| The Eidetic Reduction: Phenomenological Psychology as an Eidetic Science | p. 128 |
| Text | p. 128 |
| Synopsis | p. 132 |
| Commentary | p. 132 |
| Eidetic Intuition | p. 132 |
| Eidos and Ideation | p. 134 |
| Introduction | p. 134 |
| Naturalistic Misconceptions | p. 135 |
| Existence and Our Knowledge of Essences | p. 137 |
| The Method of Free Variation | p. 139 |
| The Function of Phenomenological Psychology for Empirical Psychology | p. 144 |
| Text | p. 144 |
| Synopsis | p. 150 |
| Commentary | p. 152 |
| The Function of Phenomenological Psychology for Empirical Psychology | p. 152 |
| Constitution | p. 155 |
| Historical Introduction | p. 155 |
| Constitutional Problems | p. 160 |
| Constitutional Problems Pertaining to the Ego | p. 165 |
| From Phenomenological Psychology to Transcendental Phenomenology | p. 173 |
| The Transcendental Problem: Its Origin and Its Quasi-Solution by Psychologism | p. 174 |
| Text | p. 174 |
| Synopsis | p. 184 |
| Commentary | p. 188 |
| On the Origin of Psychologism and the Need for a Transcendental Turn | p. 188 |
| On the Meaning of the Term "Transcendental" in Kant and Husserl | p. 199 |
| The Transcendental Reduction | p. 206 |
| Text | p. 206 |
| Synopsis | p. 212 |
| Commentary | p. 214 |
| The Transcendental Reduction | p. 214 |
| Absolute Consciousness as the Theme of Transcendental Phenomenology | p. 218 |
| Natural and Transcendental Reflection | p. 221 |
| The Doctrinal Content of the Transcendental Reduction | p. 224 |
| Pure Psychology as Propaedeutic to Transcendental Phenomenology | p. 228 |
| Text | p. 228 |
| Synopsis | p. 232 |
| Commentary | p. 233 |
| On the Phenomenological-Psychological and Transcendental Reductions in Husserl's Crisis | p. 233 |
| The Reductions in the Period between 1925 and 1931 | p. 234 |
| The Reductions in the Last Sections of Crisis | p. 236 |
| Critical Reflections | p. 240 |
| Transcendental Phenomenology as First Philosophy | p. 245 |
| Transcendental Phenomenology as Ontology: Its Function for the Eidetic and the Empirical Sciences | p. 246 |
| Text | p. 246 |
| Synopsis | p. 252 |
| Commentary | p. 254 |
| Transcendental Phenomenology and Other Forms of Knowledge | p. 254 |
| Phenomenology and Ontology | p. 254 |
| Phenomenology and the Sciences | p. 258 |
| Constitutional Problems Pertaining to the Transcendental Ego Itself | p. 261 |
| The Problem of the Self-constitution of the Transcendental Ego | p. 261 |
| Transcendental Idealism | p. 269 |
| Time and Consciousness of Time | p. 270 |
| Some Historical Observations | p. 270 |
| Analysis of Our Consciousness of Inherently Temporal Objects | p. 272 |
| Intersubjectivity | p. 277 |
| The Problem of Intersubjectivity: Attempts at a Solution | p. 277 |
| The Sphere of Transcendental Being as Monadological Intersubjectivity | p. 281 |
| Phenomenology as the All-embracing Philosophy and the Science of the Ultimate and Highest Problems | p. 300 |
| Text | p. 300 |
| Synopsis | p. 304 |
| Commentary | p. 305 |
| First and Second Philosophy | p. 305 |
| On Husserl's Conception of Metaphysics | p. 311 |
| The Function of Transcendental Phenomenology for the Life of Humanity | p. 313 |
| The Phenomenological Resolution of All Philosophical Antitheses | p. 318 |
| Text | p. 318 |
| Synopsis | p. 322 |
| Commentary | p. 323 |
| Toward the Resolution of All Philosophical Antitheses: Husserl's Transcendental Idealism | p. 323 |
| The Concern of Transcendental Phenomenology with the Life-world | p. 329 |
| The World as an Important Theme for Phenomenological Analysis | p. 329 |
| The Life-world in Crisis | p. 335 |
| Epilogue | p. 347 |
| Bibliography | p. 349 |
| Index | p. 357 |
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