•  101
    Th e Absolute Ought and the Unique Individual
    Husserl Studies 22 (3): 223-240. 2006.
    The referent of the transcendental and indexical “I” is present non-ascriptively and contrasts with “the personal I” which necessity is presenced as having properties. Each is unique but in different ways. The former is abstract and incomplete until taken as a personal I. The personal I is ontologically incomplete until it self-determines itself morally. The “absolute Ought” is the exemplary moral self-determination and it finds a special disclosure in “the truth of will.” Simmel's situation eth…Read more
  •  42
  •  44
    Edmund Husserl and the Phenomenological Tradition: Essays in Phenomenology
    Review of Metaphysics 43 (2): 423-424. 1989.
    This, for the most part, is a collection of informative and original interpretations and readings of Husserl and Husserlian themes based on a 1985 lecture series.
  •  53
    A Husserl-based social ethics is within the noetic-noematic field as disclosed through various reductions. The focus is how at the passive and active levels a bsic sense of will is in play as well as the "telos" of subjectivity in terms of both a "godly" intersubjective ideal "we". This is inseparable form the disclosure of the full sense of person through an "absolute ought" and the "truth of will" wherein the common world and common goods are tied to an ideal community as a person of a highe…Read more
  •  43
    The study of religion in Husserl's writings
    In Mano Daniel & Lester Embree (eds.), Phenomenology of the cultural disciplines, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 265--296. 1994.
  •  52
    Parts of the Fink–Husserl Conversation
    New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 1 279-299. 2001.
  •  158
    Nam-In Lee’s impressive study of “instinct” in Husserl1 gives a new sense to Husserl’s self-description of his work as a preoccupation with beginnings (see p. x) because it seeks not only to integrate the theme of instinct systematically into Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology but to demonstrate that it has a fundamental position. I believe the author has successfully demonstrated his contention that other students of Husserl who have treated the theme of instinct as a marginal consideration…Read more
  •  141
    Reflection is the basic attitude of transcendental phenomenology. However, as we shall see in this essay, prereflective experiencing may make a unique claim for philosophical foundations - albeit a claim which can only occur when mediated by reflection.
  •  66
    Although the connections of Hedwig Conrad-Martius’ ontological phenomenology, what she called, “realontology,” to Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology were constant concerns that usually remained in the background of her work, on occasion they became foreground. Similarly the problems surrounding the individuation of the person and spirit were persistent but rather marginal in her writings. In this paper I want first to review some of the issues as they are connected to ontological and transce…Read more