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Absolute subjectivity, 77 Act, intentional, 14,21,68-69 Adorno, Theodor W., xvi, xviii n Ameriks, Karl, 212 n Analogizing apprehension, 92, 94, III Appresentation, 92-93,97, 100,102 A priori: concepts, xviii; material, 149; synthetic, 169 Aristotle, 38, 41, 52, 62 Attitude: phenomenological, 3436 , 41; phenomenological concept of, 21, 55, 164; theoretical VB. nontheoretical, 200-201. See also Natural attitude Avenarius, Richard, 151 Bachelard, Suzanne, 51 n Belief, 21; modalities of, 158; in world's existence, 42-43 Berkeley, George, 13, 137 Besinnung vs. Refiexion, 59-60 Biemel, Walter, 16 n, 64 n, 183 Body (Leib) vs. physical object (Korper) , 92-93 Boehm, Rudolf, 64 Bossert, Philip, 184 n Bracketing, 24-25, 173-77,221 Brand, Gerd, 20 n Brentano, Franz, 16 n, 21 Cairns, Dorion, 89 Categorial acts and objects, 14-15 Churchill, James S., 212 n Cogitamus, 100 Cogitatum cogitans, 88, 99 Cogitatum qua cogitatum, 89 Index Communalization, 101, 108; of monads, 100-101, 104 Communication, 109, 201; and community, 105; and language, 106-8 Community, 248; and communication , 105; of monads, 100-101, 104 Compossibility,87 Constitution, IS, 77, 80; and genesis, 72 Copernican revolution. See Kant, Immanuel Copresent (mitgegenwiirtig), 93 Cosmology, 28 Crisis: of European sciences, 46; theme of, in Husserl's works, 4849 ,53 Crossen, Frederick J., 162 n Cultural world: and perceptual world, 194-211,218-19,231-32, 240-41; prior to philosophy, 235 Culture, crisis of, 45, 50 Deductive reasoning, 76 Depresentation, I I I Derrida, Jacques, 35 n, 205 n, 265 n Descartes, Rene, xix, 37,46 n, 4849 ,61,84-85,123,126-29,173, I79,I82-84,246,271-72;God in, 128; intentionality in, 128; method of doubt in, 25, 84 Dualism, psychophysical, 126 Ego(s), 77-79; empirical, II2; as monad, 80; multiplicity of, 87, 90 Eidos ego, 88 280 / INDEX Eley, Lothar, 35 n Empiricism, 126, 128; and skepticism , 125 Enlightenment, 46 Epistemology, 205 Epoche,23,25,37,176-77;in Descartes, 128; and intersubjectivity , 98; and phenomenological reduction, 27; philosophical, 63, 187,263; philosophical vs. phenomenological, III, II5-17 Essences, 17-19; transhistorical, 264 Europe, civilization of modern, 46 Existentialism, 50-51; French, xvi Explanation, psychological, 72 Expression and meaning, 10-11 Findlay, J. N., 8 n, 23 n Fink, Eugen, 9 n, 32 n, 64 n Frankfurt School, xvi Fulfillment. See Intention Funke, Gerhard, 117 n Gadamer, Hans-Georg, 67 n, 153 n, 245-46, 258 n, 273-74 Galilei, Galileo, 48-49, 57, 61, 12126 ,179,182-85,196,229-30, 233-34,239,244,270,272 Genesis, active and passive, 159 Genetic phenomenology, 68-81; and intersubjectivity, 103; vs. static phenomenological analYSis, 6971 ,73,110-11 Geometry, 18, 193-94; and language , 201; and natural science, 121-25; origin of, 202-5; public character of, 202-3, 205 German Idealism, 182-83 Goal-setting (Zwecksetzung), 7879 Greek philosophy, 274, 276; origin of, 234-35 Hampshire, Stuart, xvi Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, xvi-xvii, 102, 276 Heidegger, Martin, xvi, xxii, 36 n, 60,67,161,243-44,257-58,276 Held, Klaus, 269 n Historical reduction, 110-20, 127, 178-81,228-29,231,237-38, 240-45,248-49,259, 263,266; and phenomenological reduction, 185-87, 219, 267-70; positive side of, 270-73; and reflection, 264-66 Historical reflection, 52-53, 66-67, lII-20, 179-81,239; and phenomenological reflection, 59; vs. systematic reflection, 61-63; and the task of philosophy, 54-55 Historicism, xxiv, 49, 186,205, 226-38, 248-49; partial, 25259 ; and skepticism, 246-52; and Weltanschauungsphilosophie, II4-15 Historicity, xvii, xix, 81; of consciousness , 110-13, 228, 232-33, 238-39,248-49 History: of ideas, 51, 58, 62; of philosophy, 63; philosophy of, xvii; and poetic invention (Dichtung),180 Hohl, Herbert, xxi n Horizons: internal and external, 70, 215; perceptual, 19-20 Horkheimer, Max, xvi Humanistic disciplines (Geisteswissenschaften ), 45,134-36,197 Hume, David, 14, 17, 48-49, 127, 129,132,271 HusserI, Edmund, published and unpublished writings of, 82-83 Husserl Archives, 82-83 Idealism, 84; German, 182-83; methodological, 39; phenomenology and, 33-39; and realism, 38; subjective, 15,28,31,89, 176; transcendental, xix Ingarden, Roman, xix, xx n Inner experience, 34 Intention: empty, 14; and fulfillment , 14, 19,69,76,203-4 Intentional object, ontological status of, 21-23. See also Act, intentional Intentionality, 22, 68-69, 177, 25354 ; in Brentano, 21; in Descartes, 128; and geneSis, 80; as a relation , 16 Interest(s), theoretical, 162,207; and...

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