The Invention of Infinity: Essays on Husserl and the History of Philosophy
In: Contributions to Phenomenology, In Cooperation with The Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology 124
Introduction -- 1. The invention of infinity? On some provisional questions -- Part I: Openings -- 2. Multiplicity, manifolds and varieties of constitution. A manifesto -- 3. The reach of attitudes -- Part II: Maps -- 4. Individuum and region of being. On the unifying principle of a "headless" ontology -- 5. Mapping ontology and its boundaries -- Part III: Worlds and Unworlds -- 6. "Until the end of the world". On eidetic variation and absolute being of consciousness -- 7. Within and beyond productive imagination. A historical-critical inquiry into phenomenology -- Part IV: Paths -- 8. The vicissitudes of the improper -- 9. Back to the meanings themselves (and away from the Noema). On phenomenology and the Stoic doctrine of the lekton -- Part V: Infinity -- 10. Plato's light and Gorgias's shadow. On the manifold "beginnings" of philosophy -- 11. The Infinite Academy. On how to be a Platonist with some (Aristotelian?) help -- Conclusion -- 12. The invenvion of infinity. On a tentative answer.