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(1997) The Husserlian foundations of science, Dordrecht, Springer.

Time and history in Husserl's phenomenology

the question of their connection

Elisabeth Ströker

pp. 229-250

Husserl devoted a series of thorough investigations to the problem of time as well as the problem of history. A thematic treatment of their connection, however, is lacking in his phenomenology; and this does not only apply to Husserl's published works but evidently also to his unpublished posthumous work.1 This raises the question of whether Husserl's phenomenology has posed the problem of the connection between time and history in such a way that it can be phenomenologically elucidated in keeping with the criteria that Husserl himself established for phenomenological clarification, elucidation, and, not the least, foundation.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-8824-9_11

Full citation:

Ströker, E. (1997). Time and history in Husserl's phenomenology: the question of their connection, in The Husserlian foundations of science, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 229-250.

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