Deutsche Gesellschaftfür phänomenologische Forschung
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Ideas pertaining to a pure phenomenology and to a phenomenological philosophy I
Vol. 2
Edmund Husserl
Ideas pertaining to a pure phenomenology and to a phenomenological philosophy II
Vol. 3
Ideas pertaining to a pure phenomenology and to a phenomenological philosophy III
Vol. 1
Psychological and transcendental phenomenology and the confrontation with Heidegger (1927-1931)
Vol. 6
On the phenomenology of the consciousness of internal time (1893-1917)
Vol. 4
Early writings in the philosophy of logic and mathematics
Vol. 5
Thing and space
Vol. 7
The idea of phenomenology
Vol. 8
Analyses concerning passive and active synthesis
Vol. 9
Philosophy of arithmetic
Vol. 10
Phantasy, image consciousness, and memory (1898-1925)
Vol. 11
The basic problems of phenomenology
Vol. 12
Introduction to logic and theory of knowledge
Vol. 13
First philosophy
Vol. 14
The idea of philosophy and its historical origin
The grounding of logic and the limits of formal-apophantic analytics
First reflections on cognizing subjectivity, motivated by sophistic skepticism
The historical beginnings of the science of subjectivity
The fundamental limitation of Locke's sphere of vision and its reasons
Critical disclosure of the genuine and enduring problematic concealed in locke's investigations
Empiricism's theory of abstraction as an index of how it falls short of the idea of an eidetic science of pure consciousness
From Locke to the radical consequence of Berkeley's purely immanent philosophy
Hume's positivism
The rationalism and metaphysics of the modern period
Introduction
The idea of apodictic evidence and the problematic of the beginning
World-perception and world-belief
Supplementations and clarifications in connection with the "objection of insanity"
Opening up the field of transcendental experience transcendental, phenomenological and apodictic reduction
The transcendental temporal form of subjectivity's transcendental stream of life
On the theory of the theoretical attitude of the phenomenologist
The conscious activity of natural egoic life and the reduction to pure subjectivity
The accomplishment and problematic of a phenomenological-psychological reduction
The opening of the realm of transcendental experience following the second path
The philosophical significance of the transcendental-phenomenological reduction
Supplemental texts
The natural attitude and the "natural concept of the world"
Basic consideration
Preliminary discussion of some objections to the aim of the phenomenological reduction
Phenomenology's move beyond the realm of the absolute given
The phenomenological uncovering of the whole, unified, connected stream of consciousness
The uncovering of the phenomenological multiplicity of monads
Concluding considerations on the significance of phenomenological knowledge
"Thinking" as the theme of logic
The ideality of linguistic phenomena
Thinking as a sense constituting lived-experience
Sense-constituting lived-experiences as egoic acts
Foreground lived-experiences and background lived-experiences
The interconnection between expressing and signifying as the unity of an egoic act
Theme, interest, indication
The regression from theoretical logos to the pre-theoretical sense-giving life of consciousness
Perception and perceptual sense
Self-giving in perception
The mode of negation
The mode of doubt
The mode of possibility
Passive and active modalization
The structure of fulfillment
Passive and active intentions and the forms of their confirmation and verification
The problem of definitiveness in experience
Primordial phenomena and forms of order within passive synthesis
The phenomenon of affection
The accomplishment of affective awakening and reproductive association
The phenomenon of expectation
Illusion in the realm of remembering
The true being of the system of the immanent past
The problem of a true being for the future of consciousness
Transitional methodological considerations
Introduction. circumscribing the investigation into the active ego
Active objectivation
The fundamental structures and fundamental forms of judgment
The syntactic and the object-theoretical directions of examination
The gradation of objectivation
Supplementary texts
The characterization of what is logical taking the exact sciences as point of departure
Pure logic as theoretical science
Formal and real logic
Noetics as theory of justification of knowledge
Theory of knowledge as first philosophy
Phenomenology as science of pure consciousness
The lower forms of objectification
The higher forms of objectification
Phantasy and image consciousness
<from the theory of re-presentation in phantasy and memory to the introduction of the doctrine of reproduction or double re-presentation>
Phantasy and re-presentation (memory)
Belief as impression
<memory and iterations of memory. modal characteristics and apparencies>
Memory and phantasy. <modification of belief fundamentally different from modification of impression in reproduction. aporia
<perception, memory, phantasy, and intentions directed toward the temporal nexus>
<phantasy as "modification through and through." on the revision of the content-apprehension schema>
Immanent and internal phantasy (in the double sense). phantasy and perception. <perception as presentation, phantasy as modification of presentation>
The modifications of believing
<memory as consciousness "once again" in contrast to perception and pure phantasy>
<"sensation," memory, expectation, and phantasy as modes of time consciousness. consciousness as nexus>
perceptual series, memorial modification, phantasy modification, presentation — re-presentation, actuality and inactuality as intersecting differences. two fundamentally different concepts of phantasy
<vitality and suitability in re-presentation; empty re-presentation. internal consciousness, internal reflection. the strict concept of reproduction>
Modes of reproduction and phantasy image consciousness
<reproduction and image consciousness. separating the apprehension of an image object from the consciousness of a perceptual illusion. universalization of the concept of phantasy (re-presentation)
On the theory of image consciousness and figment consciousness
<on the theory of intuitions and their modes>
Pure possibility and phantasy
Phantasy — neutrality
The origination of the concept of multiplicity through that of the collective combination
Critical developments
The psychological nature of the collective combination
Analysis of the concept of number in terms of its origin and content
The definition of number-equality through the concept of reciprocal one-to-one correlation
The relations "more" and "less"
Definitions of number in terms of equivalence
Discussions concerning unity and multiplicity
The sense of the statement of number
Operations on numbers and the authentic number concepts
Symbolic representations of multiplicities
The symbolic representations of numbers
The logical sources of arithmetic
Original version of the text through chapter iv
Essays
Lecture I
Lecture II
Lecture III
Lecture IV
Lecture V
Addenda
Logic and General Theory of Science
Vol. 15
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