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Index
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction
§ 1 - Science, Intentionality, and Historical Background
Husserl’s Philosophy of Science
Husserl’s Unified Theory: A Theory of Theory, Essence, Meaning, Part/Whole, Intentionality, Evidence—and Thus Empirical Science
Intentionality, Indexicality, Global Indexicality, and Historicality in Husserl’s Theory of Science
Husserl vis-à-vis Carnap’s Constitution Theory of Empirical Science
Husserl vis-à-vis Quine’s Web Model of Empirical Theory
Husserl vis-à-vis Friedman’s Theory of the Relativized A Priori in Physics
Husserlian Theory of Science with Restricted or Relativized Formal Ontology
Conclusion
§ 2 - The Lebenswelt in Husserl
Phenomenology as a Study of the Subjective Perspective
The Noema, Intentionality
Filling
Constitution
The World, the Past, and Values
Horizon
The Noema, the Horizon, and the World
The Iceberg
Life-World and Natural World
Pregivenness and Intersubjectivity
Was the Life-World a Late Development in Husserl?
One Life-World or Many?
Science and the Life-World
Ultimate Justification
§ 3 - The Origin and Significance of Husserl’s Notion of the Lebenswelt
A Brief Review of Husserl’s Crisis
Weyl’s “Ridiculous Circle”
§ 4 - Husserl on the Origins of Geometry
Husserl aux pantoufles
On Husserl’s Awe in the Face of Geometry
Bigger Game
Primal Beginnings
Kant’s Awe
Galileo’s Mathematization of Nature
Proof and Its Objects (Bis)
The Historical A Priori
Sedimentation
Sedimentation in Pure Mathematics
Sedimentation in Mathematical Physics
Cognition, History, and the A Priori
§ 5 - The Crisis as Philosophy of History
Substantive Philosophy of History
Critical Philosophy of History
Historicity
§ 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
Introduction
Galilean Science, the Life-World, the Manifest, and Scientific Images
Synchronic and Diachronic Priority
Problems from the History of Knowledge
Four Critical Remarks
§ 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
Concepts: From Research to Language
Charles Dufay and the Two Electricities
How the Two Electricities Were Received
Sedimentation and the Impact of Concepts
Concepts and Facts
Sedimentation: Geometry and the Sciences
The Picture of Science
Notes
Works by Husserl
General Bibliography
Index
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