Preface. Introduction: (a) General and Historical Introduction. (b) The Secondary Literature on Husserl's Concept of Synthesis. 1. Logical Investigation I: Unity in Multiplicity: Meaning, Science, and the Fluctuation of Occasional Expressions. 2. Logical Investigation II: The Unity of Species and the Multiplicity of Individuals. The Problem of Synthesis: The Grounding of Universals. 3. Logical Investigation III: The Theory of Parts and Wholes: The Dynamic of Individuating and Contextualizing Interpretation. 4. Logical Investigation IV: Syncategorematic Terms: The Problem of Representing the Synthetic Connections that Underlie Meanings. 5. Logical Investigation V: Names Refer Back to Judgments and Judgments Refer Back to Names: The Problem of Referring Back to Simples. 6. Logical Investigation VI: Five Elements in Husserl's Account of the Syntheses of Epistemic Fulfilment. Section 1: The Categories of Universal Names. Section 2: The Categories of Context. Section 3: The Categories of Perspective and Cognitive Ordering. Section 4: The Categories of Limit. Conclusion: Section 5: The Categories of Referring Backward. Appendix: Ideas 1 (sections 118-124): Drawing Back to the Ego: Synthesis and Phenomenological Science. Bibliography. Index.
Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.