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The historicity of sense in Husserl's origin of geometry.

by Karl Tat Leung Ip. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1990. / Bibliography: leaves 94-104. / Abstract / Acknowledgements / INTRODUCTION --- p.1 / Chapter §1. --- The Delimitation of the Investigation --- p.1 / Chapter § 2 . --- Preparatory Considerations --- p.7 / Chapter CHAPTER I. --- SENSE AS IDEAL OBJECTIVITY --- p.11 / Chapter §1. --- The Necessity of The Determination of Sense as Ideal Objectivity --- p.12 / Chapter §2. --- The Significance of The Genesis of Ideal Objectivity --- p.15 / Chapter §3. --- The Meaning of Ideal Objectivity --- p.16 / Chapter A. --- The delimitation of ideal Objectivity --- p.16 / Chapter B. --- The stratification of ideal Objectivity --- p.20 / Chapter CHAPTER II. --- THE HOW OF ORIGIN: LANGUAGE AND THE LIVING PRESENT --- p.24 / Chapter §1. --- The Pure Possibility of Lingual Expressibility --- p.25 / Chapter §2. --- "The Unity of Language, Human Existence and The World" --- p.29 / Chapter A. --- The world and human existence --- p.29 / Chapter (i) --- The world as horizon --- p.29 / Chapter (ii) --- The human community as horizon --- p.32 / Chapter (iii) --- The relation between the world and human existence --- p.33 / Chapter B. --- The common language --- p.33 / Chapter (i) --- The human community as lingual horizon --- p.33 / Chapter (ii) --- The world as lingual horizon --- p.35 / Chapter (iii) --- Further clarification --- p.36 / Chapter §3. --- The Objectification of Sense --- p.38 / Chapter A. --- The living present and psychical validity --- p.38 / Chapter B. --- Speech and interpsychical validity --- p.40 / Chapter C. --- Writing and absolute validity --- p.41 / Chapter CHAPTER III. --- "THE HOW OF TRADITION: SEDIMENTATION, REACTIVATION AND UNIVOCITY" --- p.44 / Chapter §1. --- The Dialectic of Origin and Tradition --- p.45 / Chapter §2 . --- Sedimentation and Reactivation --- p.47 / Chapter A. --- The Original Mode of Language --- p.47 / Chapter B. --- Two Derivative Mode of Language --- p.49 / Chapter (i) --- Passivity --- p.49 / Chapter (ii) --- Logicality --- p.51 / Chapter C. --- Implications --- p.52 / Chapter § 3 . --- Univocity --- p.54 / Chapter A. --- Univocity as the ultimate condition of sedimentation and reactivation --- p.54 / Chapter B. --- Univocity as telos --- p.56 / Chapter CHAPTER IV. --- HISTORY AS THE ALL-ENCOMPASSING ULTIMATE HORIZON --- p.58 / Chapter §1. --- The Historical Present --- p.58 / Chapter §2. --- Horizon as The Concrete Form of History --- p.62 / Chapter §3. --- Pure History and Real History --- p.66 / Chapter CHAPTER V. --- THE SOURCE OF IDEALITY --- p.69 / Chapter §1. --- Idealization and Imaginative Variation --- p.71 / Chapter §2. --- Idealization as Infinitization --- p.74 / CONCLUSION --- p.82 / Chapter §1. --- Recapitulation --- p.82 / Chapter §2 . --- Going Beyond --- p.89 / BIBLIOGRPHY --- p.94

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:cuhk.edu.hk/oai:cuhk-dr:cuhk_318634
Date January 1990
ContributorsIp, Karl Tat Leung., Chinese University of Hong Kong Graduate School. Division of Philosophy.
PublisherChinese University of Hong Kong
Source SetsThe Chinese University of Hong Kong
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, bibliography
Formatprint, 104 leaves ; 30 cm.
RightsUse of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons “Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International” License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)

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