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(1996) Issues in Husserl's Ideas II, Dordrecht, Springer.

"Essences and experts" Husserl's view of the foundations of the sciences

Ted Klein

pp. 67-80

The first chapter of Husserl's Ideas III 1 is devoted to some problems relating to "The Different Regions of Reality." Husserl begins with a reference to the phenomenological investigations into constitution already carried out in Ideas II 2, and claims that the practice there of "our phenomenological-kinetic method"3 enabled him to ascertain "the fundamental distinction among merely material thing, animate organism, and psyche, or psychic Ego, which dominates all apprehension of the world" (V: 1/">1). He says that he has shown the "phenomenological primal sources" of the distinction among "thing" (Ding),"Body" (Leib),and "psyche" (Seele), and thus that he has grounded or justified it.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-8628-3_5

Full citation:

Klein, T. (1996)., "Essences and experts" Husserl's view of the foundations of the sciences, in T. Nenon & L. Embree (eds.), Issues in Husserl's Ideas II, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 67-80.

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