Husserl, Kant and transcendental phenomenology
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Husserl, Kant, and Transcendental Phenomenology -- Section I: The Transcendantal and the A priori -- The Meaning of the Transcendental in the Philosophies of Kant and Husserl -- The Ethics of the Transcendental -- The Phenomenological a priori as Husserlian Solution to the Problem of Kant's "Transcendental Psychologism" -- On the Naturalization of the Transcendental -- Kant, Husserl, and the Aim of a "Transcendental Anthropology" -- Section II: The Ego and the Sphere of Otherness -- Transcendental Apperception and Temporalization -- "The Ego beside Itself" -- Kant and Husserl on Overcoming Skeptical Idealism through Transcendental Idealism -- "Pure Ego and Nothing More" -- Towards a Phenomenological Metaphysics -- The Transcendental Grounding of the Experience of the Other (Fremderfahrung) in Husserl's Phenomenology -- Section III: Aesthetic, Logic, Science, Ethics -- Aesthetic, Intuition, Experience -- Synthesis and Identity -- Questions of Genesis as Questions of Validity -- Philosophical Scientists and Scientific Philosophers -- A Phenomenological Critique of Kantian Ethics -- Section IV: Transcendental Philosophy in Debate -- Is There a "Copernican" or an "Anti-Copernican" Revolution in Phenomenology? -- Back to Fichte? -- "An Explosive Thought:" Kant, Fink, and the Cosmic Concept of the World -- Eugen Fink's Transcendental Phenomenology of the World -- Amphibian Dreams -- Husserlian Phenomenology in the Light of Microphenomenology -- Index of Persons -- Subject Index