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Tables of Contents for Husserl and the Cartesian Meditationsserl and the Cartesian Meditations
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Preface
vii
 
Note on Translations and Citations
xiv
 
List of Abbreviations
xvii
 
Introduction (§§1--2)
1
1
The `Idea' of Philosophy
2
7
Husserl and Descartes
9
6
First Meditation (§§3--11)
15
45
The Epoche and the Transcendental Reduction
18
15
The Constitution of Objects
33
10
Transcendental Phenomenology and Psychology
43
2
Evidenz and Intuition
45
9
`The Cartesian Way'
54
6
Second Meditation (§§12--22)
60
47
Intentionality
64
11
The Concept of Horizon
75
4
`Sensualism' and the Sense-Datum Theory
79
7
Time-Consciousness and Hyle
86
14
Intentional Analysis
100
7
(Most of the) Fourth Meditation (§§30--39)
107
51
Ego, Person, Monad
108
7
Static and Genetic Phenomenology
115
10
Active and Passive Synthesis
125
8
Eidetic Phenomenology and the Nature of Thought
133
10
Founding
143
6
Transcendental Instincts and `Drive-Intentionality'
149
9
Third Meditation and Part of the Fourth (§§23--29, 40--41)
158
54
Reality and Reason
159
8
World
167
4
Reality as an `Idea'
171
5
Reality and Objectivity
176
3
Husserl's Idealism
179
4
A Husserlian Proof of Idealism
183
5
Theoretical Science and the Life-World
188
12
Husserl's Metaphysics
200
12
Fifth Meditation (§§42--62)
212
40
The Sphere of Ownness
215
5
The Body
220
4
Empathy
224
5
Intersubjectivity
229
6
Empathy: The Wider Picture
235
12
The Status and Scope of Husserl's Account of Empathy
247
5
Conclusion (§§63--64)
252
6
Appendix: Original Passages from Husserl's Unpublished Manuscripts
258
7
Bibliography
265
4
Index
269