
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1980
Pages: 99-134
Series: Phaenomenologica
ISBN (Hardback): 9789048182589
Full citation:
, "Time and subjectivity", in: Hume and Husserl, Berlin, Springer, 1980
Abstract
The previous chapter attempted to reveal Hume's relevance for Husserl's turn from static intentional analysis to genetic intentional analysis. Static analysis undertakes to clarify eidetically the various forms and types of noetic-noematic correlations as well as the varied horizontal levels on which they are found. Genetic analysis seeks to clarify the genetic constitution of these noetic-noematic correlations in concrete intentional consciousness. This "history" of consciousness is not factual but eidetic: "...with eidetic genesis there is given only the mode of genesis in which some apperception or other of this type must have come originally into being in an individual stream of consciousness..."1
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 1980
Pages: 99-134
Series: Phaenomenologica
ISBN (Hardback): 9789048182589
Full citation:
, "Time and subjectivity", in: Hume and Husserl, Berlin, Springer, 1980