Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction
§ 1 - Science, Intentionality, and Historical Background
§ 2 - The Lebenswelt in Husserl
§ 3 - The Origin and Significance of Husserl’s Notion of the Lebenswelt
§ 4 - Husserl on the Origins of Geometry
§ 5 - The Crisis as Philosophy of History
§ 6 - Science, History, and Transcendental Subjectivity in Husserl’s Crisis
§ 7 - Universality and Spatial Form
§ 8 - Husserl, History, and Consciousness
§ 9 - Science, Philosophy, and the History of Knowledge: Husserl’s Conception of a Life-World and Sellars’s Manifest and Scientific Images
§ 10 - On the Historicity of Scientific Knowledge: Ludwik Fleck, Gaston Bachelard, Edmund Husserl
§ 11 - Foucault, Cavaillès, and Husserl on the Historical Epistemology of the Sciences
§ 12 - Concepts, Facts, and Sedimentation in Experimental Science
Notes
Works by Husserl
General Bibliography
Index