This volume explores Husserls theory of sensibility and his conceptualization of spatial and temporal constitution. The author maps the linkages between?Husserls transcendental aesthetic, the theory of pure experience in empirio-criticism, as well as Immanuel Kants transcendental philosophy. The core argument in this analysis centers on the relationship between spatiality and temporality in Husserls philosophy. The study interrogates Husserls understanding of the relationship between spatiality and temporality in terms of stratifications, analogies and parallelisms. It incorporates a discussion of the potentialities and limitations of such an understanding. It concludes that such limits can be overcome by adopting an understanding of spatiality and temporality as interwoven moments of sensible experiencea spatio-temporal intertwining. This intertwining is made explicit in a thorough inquiry into three central topics in the phenomenological analysis of sensible experience: spatio-temporal individuation, perspectival givenness and bodily experience. The book shows how such an inquiry can form the bedrock of a dynamic and relational understanding of experience as a whole.Part 1 Introduction.- Chapter 1 Introduction.- Part?2 Husserls transcendental aesthetic.- Chapter?2 The phenomenological aesthetic.- Chapter?3 The transcendental aesthetic: Husserl and Kant.- Part?3 Parallelisms, stratifications, and beyond.- Chapter?4 Intuitiveness, constitution, and idealization: modes of spatial and temporal experience.- Chapter?5 The thing of the transcendental aesthetic: Spatial and temporal constitution.- Part?4 Spatio-temporal intertwining. The dynamics of experience.- Chapter?6 Individuation, irreversibility, and the spatio-temporal intertwining.- Chapter?7 Perspectival givenness.- Chapter?8 The transcendental aesthetic and the lived-body.- Part 5 Conclusions.- Chapter 9 Conclusions.- Index.
Offer a variety of meticulous analyses & into almost every aspeclƒ%