Epistemology, Archaeology, Ethics: Current Investigations of Husserl's Corpus presents fifteen original essays by an international team of expert contributors that together represent a cross-section of Husserl Studies today. The collection manifests the extent to which single themes in Husserl's corpus cannot be isolated, but must be considered in relation to their overlap with each other.
Many of the accepted views of Husserl's philosophy are currently in a state of flux, with positions that once seemed incontestable now finding themselves relegated to the status of one particular school of thought among several. Among all the new trends and approaches, this volume offers a representative sample of how Husserlian research should be conducted given the current state of the corpus. The book is divided into four parts, each dedicated to an area of Husserl Studies that is currently gaining prominence: Husserlian epistemology; his views on intentionality; the?archaeology of constitution; and ethics, a relatively recent field of study in phenomenology.
Introduction, Pol Vandevelde and Sebastian Luft \ Husserl's works cited \ Part I: Toward a Broadened Epistemology \ 1. Epistemic Justification and Husserl's Phenomenology of Reason' in Ideas I, Carlos Sanchez (San Jos? State University, USA) \ 2. A Defense of Husserl's Method of Free Variation, David Kasmier (independent scholar) \ 3. The Body as Noematic Bridge Between Nature and Culture, Luis Rabanaque (Universid?d Cat?lica Argentina) \ 4. The Partial Re-Enchantment of Nature in Husserl and Merleau-Ponty, Daniel Dwyer (Xavier University, USA) \ 5. Transcendental Subjectivity, Embodied Subjectivity and Intersubjectivity in Husserl's Transcendental Idealism, Arun Iyer (Marquette University, USA) \ Part II: Toward an Archaeology of Constitution \ 6. Aporetic Approach to Husserl's Reflections on Time, John Anders (University of Las Vegas, USA) \ 7. Protention as More Than Inverse Retention, Neal DeRoo (Bostonl“P