CONTENTS

Introduction

Editor’s Foreword

Part One
The Lectures on Internal Time-Consciousness from the Year 1905

Introduction

§    1.  The Exclusion of Objective Time

§    2.  The Question of the “Origin of Time”

Section One: Bretano’s Theory Concerning the Origin of Time

§    3.  The Primordial Associations

§    4.  The Gaining of the Future and Infinite Time

§    5.  The Transformation of Ideas through Temporal Characters

§    6.  Critique

Section Two: The Analysis of Time-Consciousness

§    7.  The Interpretation of the Comprehension of Temporal Objects as Momentary Comprehension and as Enduring Act

§    8.  Immanent Temporal Objects and Their Modes of Appearance

§    9.  The Consciousness of the Appearances of Immanent Objects

§ 10.  The Continua of Running-Off Phenomena—The Diagram of Time

§ 11.  Primal Impression and Retentional Modification

§ 12.  Retention as Proper Intentionality

§ 13.  The Necessity for the Precedence of Impression over Every Retention—Self-evidence of Retention

§ 14.  Reproduction of Temporal Objects—Secondary Remembrance

§ 15.  The Modes of Accomplishment of Reproduction

§ 16.  Perception as Originary Presentation as Distinguished from Retention and Recollection

§ 17.  Perception as a Self-Giving Act in Contrast to Reproduction

§ 18.  The Significance of Recollection for the Constitution of the Consciousness of Duration and Succession

§ 19.  The Difference between Retention and Reproduction (Primary and Secondary Remembrance or Phantasy)

§ 20.  The “Freedom” of Reproduction

§ 21.  Levels of Clarity of Reproduction

§ 22.  The Certainty of Reproduction

§ 23.  The Coincidence of the Now Reproduced with a Past Now—The Distinction between Phantasy and Recollection

§ 24.  Protentions in Recollection

§ 25.  The Double Intentionality of Recollection

§ 26.  The Difference between Memory and Expectation

§ 27.  Memory as Consciousness of Having-Been-Perceived

§ 28.  Memory and Figurative Consciousness—Memory as Positing Reproduction

§ 29.  Memory of the Present

§ 30.  The Preservation of the Objective Intention in the Retentional Modification

§ 31.  Primal Impressions and Objective Individual Temporal Points

§ 32.  The Part of Reproduction in the Constitution of the One Objective Time

§ 33.  Some A priori Temporal Laws

Section Three: The Levels of Constitution of Time and Temporal Objects

§ 34.  The Differentiation of the Levels of Constitution

§ 35.  Differences between the Constituted Unities and the Constitutive Flux

§ 36.  The Temporally Constitutive Flux as Absolute Subjectivity

§ 37.  Appearances of Transcendent Objects as Constituted Unities

§ 38.  Unity of the Flux of Consciousness and the Constitution of Simultaneity and Succession

§ 39.  The Double Intentionality of Retention and the Constitution of the Flux of Consciousness

§ 40.  The Constituted Immanent Content

§ 41.  Self-Evidence of the Immanent Content—Alteration and Constancy

§ 42.  Impression and Reproduction

§ 43.  The Constitution of Thing-Appearances and Things—Constituted Apprehensions and Primal Apprehensions

§ 44.  Internal and External Perception

§ 45.  The Constitution of Non-Temporal Transcendencies

Part Two
Addenda and Supplements to the Analysis of Time-Consciousness from the Years 1905-1910

Appendix I: Primal Impression and Its Continuum of Modifications

Appendix II: Presentification and Phantasy—Impression and Imagination

Appendix III: The Correlational Intentions of Perception and Memory—The Modes of Time-Consciousness

Appendix IV: Recollection and the Constitution of Temporal Objects and Objective Time

Appendix V: The Simultaneity of Perception and the Perceived

Appendix VI: Comprehension of the Absolute Flux—Perception in the Fourfold Sense

Appendix VII: The Constitution of Simultaneity

Appendix VIII: The Double Intentionality of the Stream of Consciousness

Appendix IX: Primal Consciousness and the Possibility of Reflection

Appendix X: The Objectivation of Time and of the Material in Time

Appendix XI: Adequate and Inadequate Perception

Appendix XII: Internal Consciousness and the Comprehension of Lived Experiences

Appendix XIII: The Constitution of Spontaneous Unities as Immanent Temporal Objects—Judgment as a Temporal Form and Absolute Time-Constituting Consciousness