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ABSTRACT. The purpose of this article is to gain a deeper understanding of Husserl’s distinction between conceptual and empirical inquiry, his method of reduction, his commitment to idealism, his aim of criticizing epistemological naturalism, and his definition of the transcendent world. The paper generates insights about Husserl’s prioritization of immanence, his account of the primal impression, his prioritization of consciousness, and his transcendental idealism. The results of the current study converge with prior research on Husserl’s philosophical idealism, his realism, his development of transcendental phenomenology, and his project of philosophical reform. pp. 103–108

Keywords: Husserl, world, consciousness, transcendental phenomenology, meaning

 

ION CONSTANTIN
PhD C., IFPCRM, Romanian Academy
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