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(2002) Phenomenology of time, Dordrecht, Springer.

Developments in the years following the lecture course from WS '04/'05

Toine Kortooms

pp. 79-103

In this chapter, I shall address a few of the developments that occurred in Husserl's thinking on time-consciousness in the years following the lecture course from WS '04/'05.1 Two considerations have guided my choice of these developments. On the one hand, the developments concerned link up with the analysis of the lecture course from WS '04/'05. On the other hand, they concern issues that are also addressed in the second part of this inquiry, in which the L-manuscripts are discussed. The first development is the one in which Husserl considers time-consciousness to be an absolute consciousness. I shall address it here by means of a number of texts from Husserl's lecture course from WS '06/'07 and his lecture course from the summer semester of 1909 (SS '09).

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-9918-4_3

Full citation:

Kortooms, T. (2002). Developments in the years following the lecture course from WS '04/'05, in Phenomenology of time, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 79-103.

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