Logical Investigations,1 whose first edition was published in 1900-01. The fifth investigation, entitled "On Intentional Experiences and Their "Contents'," presents Husserl's detailed analysis of intentionality, distinguishes it from Brentano's, and initiates an account of knowledge in terms of intentionality, a project which is continued in the sixth investigation. The presentation of the Investigations, even while disagreeing with Brentano, extends Brentano's notion of what is best called "descriptive psychology." Husserl, however, soon came to recognize that phenomenology could not properly be conceived merely as a descriptive psychology and that a descriptive psychology was unable to address adequately problems surrounding the nature of cognition. Consequently, he moved beyond descriptive psychology to an explicitly transcendental phenomenology." /> Introduction - Drummond John; Embree Lester | sdvig press

Introduction

John Drummond, Lester Embree

pp. 1-7


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