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(2002) Phenomenology of time, Dordrecht, Springer.

The context of Husserl's first analysis of time-consciousness

Toine Kortooms

pp. 3-38

During the winter semester of 1904/'05, Husserl gave a lecture course (Vorlesung) under the title "Important Points from the Phenomenology and Theory of Knowledge." This lecture course consists of four parts. The first is entitled: "On Perception," the second: "On Attention, Specific Meaning etc.," the third: "Phantasy and Image-Consciousness," and the fourth: "On the Phenomenology of Time."1 The fourth part of this lecture course from the winter semester of 19041'052 will be at the center of the first part of this inquiry. In the introduction to his analysis of time-consciousness, Husserl points out that the success of this analysis depends on a minute analysis of intuitive acts in general, such as perception, phantasy and memory.3 Husserl here refers to the analyses he had carried out in previous parts of his lecture course in that winter semester.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-9918-4_1

Full citation:

Kortooms, T. (2002). The context of Husserl's first analysis of time-consciousness, in Phenomenology of time, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 3-38.

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