“Edmund Husserl’s Phenomenology”
It has been insistently urged on me over the past several years by friends, colleagues, and former students to publish together my major Husserl papers, many of which have hitherto been scattered in collections, festschriften, journals, and other places of difficult access to the ordinary student. The present collection is meant to do just this.
These essays represent quite a number of years of research, ranging from 1964 to the present, and I would like to thank the editors of the journals or collections in which they have previously appeared for giving me permission to republish them in this form, though they have frequently been rewritten and updated and, I trust, arranged in a more logical sequence than that in which they originally appeared. The sources of these essays are the following:
Chapter I first appeared under the title “Revolution in Philosophy: What is Phenomenology?” in The Southwestern Journal of Philosophy (1971), pp. 73-91, having been delivered at Drew University, October 14, 1971, as the first of a series of six lectures before the Graduate Colloquium on Phenomenology.
Chapter II first appeared in much this form in Humanitas (1975), pp. 201-17.
Chapter III is reprinted with permission from the volume edited by Lester E. Embree, Life-World and Consciousness (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1972), pp. 233-61.
Chapter IV is reprinted with permission from Husserl Studies 1 (1984), pp. 243-61.
Chapter V is reprinted from Philosophy and Phenomenological Research (1964), pp. 52-63.
Chapter VI has not been published before but will appear in due course in Man and World.
Chapter VII is reprinted from K. K. Cho, Philosophy and Science in Phenomenological Perspective, Essays in Memory of Marvin Farber (The Hague, 1984), pp. 75-84.
The main reason for bringing my Husserl studies together in one volume, therefore, is not that they have not been published before, some of them more than once, but that it is the only way I can hope to have them available as a unit for my students and interested scholars.
I wish to thank all those who have contributed to this volume with their help and suggestions, and particularly our departmental secretaries, Audrey Thiel and Marina Pianu, for their typing.
JME
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