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his Formal and Transcendental Logic,1 Husserl stresses the central place of a theory of evidence, due to whose development alone "has a seriously scientific transcendental philosophy ("critique of reason'2) become possible, as well as, at bottom, a seriously scientific psychology, conceived centrally as the science of the proper essence of the psychic . . .." 3 Only a full theory of evidence, developed on the basis of a thorough criticism of "reason," can properly yield a serious theory and approach to consciousness. He also emphasizes many times the fundamental failure of traditional philosophy to develop a proper and adequate conception of evidence. A brief rehearsal of this, and a systematic placement of the criticism of evidence in the theory of consciousness, will help to show the historical and vital urgency of those issues." />
pp. 184-207
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