limit-phenomena, intersubjective phenomena, and paradoxical phenomena. Secondly, I engage in the question (central to Husserl himself) of the transcendental necessity of phenomena in question. This engagement culminates in the realization, that in the absence of birth, death, and sleep, subjectivity could not be conceived as a world-constituting subjectivity. Thirdly, so as to accentuate the distinguishing features of Husserl's analyses, I bring them into a polemic with Heidegger's notion of authentic temporality." /> On birth, death, and sleep in Husserl's late manuscripts on time - Geniusas Saulius | sdvig press

On birth, death, and sleep in Husserl's late manuscripts on time

Saulius Geniusas

pp. 71-89


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