Husserl's Constitutive Phenomenology

Its Problem and Promise

By Bob Sandmeyer

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About the Book

If Edmund Husserl's true philosophy lay in his unpublished research manuscripts, as he argues, then it is in these – rather than the "introductions" and fragmentary studies he published during his lifetime – that we may possibly find a systematic of his philosophy. This work constitutes a study of the full range of Husserl's writings with the special task of uncovering there the systematic presentation or presentations of the transcendental phenomenological problematic. Sandmeyer's study contains an overview of Husserl's total set of writings, a translation of Husserl correspondence with Georg Misch, a translation of a draft outline of the "system of phenomenological philosophy" produced by Husserl in collaboration with his assistant, Eugen Fink, and it also closely traces the influence of Wilhelm Dilthey on Husserl's philosophy.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

Chapter One: A Question of Focus

Chapter Two: A Unitary Impulse: Husserl's Confrontation with Dilthey

Chapter Three: The Development of Constitutive Phenomenology

Chapter Four: The System of Phenomenological Philosophy

Conclusion

Appendix 1: Husserl's Publishing History

Appendix 2: The Husserl – Misch Correspondence

Appendix 3: Draft Arrangements for Edmund Husserl's Time Investigations

Appendix 4: Systems of Phenomenological Philosophy

Notes

Bibliography

Index

About the Author(s)

Bob Sandmeyer is a lecturer at the University of Kentucky. He contributes book reviews to the Journal of the History of Philosophy, and has maintained the website The Husserl Page (husserlpage.com) since 1996.