E. Husserl's phenomenological theory of consciousness (Critical essay): Kyiv: Naukova dumka, 1971, 104 p.
Synopsis
The monograph reveals the theoretical sources and methodological principles of Husserl's (1859-1938) phenomenology. His views had a significant impact on modern bourgeois philosophy. The author critically analyzes the main concepts of Husserl's theory (phenomenon, intentionality, reduction). Husserl, continuing the traditions of German classical philosophy, develops the problem of subject activity on an idealistic basis. In the monograph, the author criticizes the subjective-idealistic limitations of the phenomenological concept of consciousness from a Marxist perspective.
CONTENT
Introduction (3)
Husserl and the problem of the grounding of logic (8)
The development of phenomenology from "strict science" to metaphysics (23)
Methodological principles of phenomenology (41)
Subjective idealist character of E. Husserl's concept of consciousness (60)
Husserl's ontological doctrine and its controversies (76)
The subject-object problem in phenomenology (84)
Conclusion (98)
Abstract (100)
Bibliography (101)