Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Chapter 1.Seebohm's Hermeneutics (Robert Dostal).- Chapter 2. The Tasks and Contexts of Understanding in Dilthey and Seebohm (Rudolf Makkreel).- Chapter 3. Phenomenological Reduction and Methodological Abstraction (Roberto Walton).- Chapter 4. The First Specific Abstractive Reduction in Seebohm's Theory of Science (Lester Embree).- Chapter 5. Mathesis and Lifeworld: Some Remarks on Thomas Seebohm's History as a Science and the System of the Sciences (James Dodd).- Chapter 6. The Inadequacy of Husserlian Formal Mereology for the Regional Ontology of Chemical Wholes (Marina Paola Banchetti-Robino).- Chapter 7. Science, Intentionality, Control, and the Strata of Experience (Harry Reeder).- Chapter 8. On Thomas Seebohm's History as a Science and the System of the Sciences (David Carr).- Chapter 9. Seebohm und Husserl on the Humanities (Thomas Nenon).- Chapter 10. History, the Sciences, and Disinterested Observers: A Dialogue between Alfred Schutz and Thomas Seebohm (Michael Barber).- Chapter 11. From the Epistemology of Physics to the Phenomenology of Nature: Some Reflections in the Wake of Seebohm's Theses (Pedro Alves).- Chapter 12. The paradox of subjectivity and the Idea of Ultimate Grounding in Husserl and Heidegger," in Phenomenology and Indian Philosophy, ed. Chattopadhyaya, D.P. et. al. (SUNY Press 1992) 153-168.- chapter 13. Fichte's and Husserl's Critique of Kant's Transcendental Deduction.- Chapter 14. Husserls on the Human Sciences in Ideen II.- Chapter 15. "Possible Worlds," in Phenomenology East and West, ed. FM Kirkland & DP Chattopadhyaya.