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Coming from what is arguably the most productive period of
Husserl's life, this volume offers the reader a first translation
into English of Husserl's renowned lectures on passive synthesis',
given between 1920 and 1926. These lectures are the first extensive
application of Husserl's newly developed genetic phenomenology to
perceptual experience and to the way in which it is connected to
judgments and cognition. They include an historical reflection on
the crisis of contemporary thought and human spirit, provide an
archaeology of experience by questioning back into sedimented
layers of meaning, and sketch the genealogy of judgment in active
synthesis'. Drawing upon everyday events and personal experiences,
the Analyses are marked by a patient attention to the subtle
emergence of sense in our lives. By advancing a phenomenology of
association that treats such phenomena as bodily kinaesthesis,
temporal genesis, habit, affection, attention, motivation, and the
unconscious, Husserl explores the cognitive dimensions of the body
in its affectively significant surroundings. An elaboration of
these diverse modes of evidence and their modalizations
(transcendental aesthetic), allows Husserl to trace the origin of
truth up to judicative achievements (transcendental logic). Joined
by several of Husserl's essays on static and genetic method, the
Analyses afford a richness of description unequalled by the
majority of Husserl's works available to English readers. Students
of phenomenology and of Husserl's thought will find this an
indispensable work.
Since the introduction of phenomenology to Japan in the 1910's,
Japan has steadily become a major international site for both
original and scholarly phenomenological work. Phenomenology in
Japan presents several of Japan's leading phenomenologists, studied
in both the Buddhist and Western thought, who bring to bear their
unique backgrounds on our rich fields of experience. These
contributions converge in novel ways on the problem of dualist',
and draw on resources within the phenomenological tradition to
respond to its challenges.
Coming from what is arguably the most productive period of
Husserl's life, this volume offers the reader a first translation
into English of Husserl's renowned lectures on passive synthesis',
given between 1920 and 1926. These lectures are the first extensive
application of Husserl's newly developed genetic phenomenology to
perceptual experience and to the way in which it is connected to
judgments and cognition. They include an historical reflection on
the crisis of contemporary thought and human spirit, provide an
archaeology of experience by questioning back into sedimented
layers of meaning, and sketch the genealogy of judgment in active
synthesis'. Drawing upon everyday events and personal experiences,
the Analyses are marked by a patient attention to the subtle
emergence of sense in our lives. By advancing a phenomenology of
association that treats such phenomena as bodily kinaesthesis,
temporal genesis, habit, affection, attention, motivation, and the
unconscious, Husserl explores the cognitive dimensions of the body
in its affectively significant surroundings. An elaboration of
these diverse modes of evidence and their modalizations
(transcendental aesthetic), allows Husserl to trace the origin of
truth up to judicative achievements (transcendental logic). Joined
by several of Husserl's essays on static and genetic method, the
Analyses afford a richness of description unequalled by the
majority of Husserl's works available to English readers. Students
of phenomenology and of Husserl's thought will find this an
indispensable work.
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