Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION PART I. HUSSERL: THE OUTLINES OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL-PHENOMENOLOGICAL SYSTEM
Chapter 1. Husserl's Phenomenological Discovery of the Natural Attitude
Chapter 2. Husserl's Theory of the Phenomenological Reduction: Between Lifeworld and Cartesianism
Chapter 3. Some Methodological Problems Arising in Husserl's Late Reflections on the Phenomenological Reduction
Chapter 4. Facticity and Historicity as Constituents of the Lifeworld in Husserl's Late Philosophy
Chapter 5. Husserl's Concept of the "Transcendental Person." Another Look at the Husserl-Heidegger Relationship
Chapter 6. Dialectics of the Absolute: The Systematics of the Phenomenological System in Husserl's Last Period
PART II. HUSSERL, KANT, AND NEO-KANTIANISM: FROM SUBJECTIVITY TO LIFEWORLD AS A WORLD OF CULTURE
Chapter 7. From Being to Givenness and Back: Some Remarks on the Meaning of Transcendental Idealism in Kant and Husserl
Chapter 8. Reconstruction and Reduction: Natorp and Husserl on Method and the Question of Subjectivity
Chapter 9. A Hermeneutic Phenomenology of Subjective and Objective Spirit: Husserl, Natorp, and Cassirer
Chapter 10. Cassirer's Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Between Reason and Relativism. A Critical Appraisal
PART III. TOWARDS AN HUSSERLIAN HERMENEUTICS
Chapter 11. The Subjectivity of Effective Consciousness and the Suppressed Husserlian Elements in Gadamer's Hermeneutics
Chapter 12. Husserl's "Hermeneutical Phenomenology" as a Philosophy of Culture
Bibliography