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The Subject and the PhotographThe Photograph and Space; Some Aspects of Photography and Art; A Final Comment: Photography and Essence; References; Chapter 4: Hobbes and Husserl; Philosophical Method; Perception and Imagination; Metaphysical, Mathematical, and Political Questions; References; Chapter 5: From the World to Philosophy, and Back; Categorial Intuition and Aristotle; Husserl and Kant on Philosophy; Husserl on Kant; Philosophy and the World; World and Horizon; References; Chapter 6: Sense and Reference, Again; Expressions; Sense and Reference (in the Traditional Sense of the Term)

Sense Without Reference? (Act I)An Ostensible Possibility of Nonsense (Sense Without Reference
Act II); The Ways of Reference; The Unboundedness of Meaning; Fulfilling Sense and Sense `Simpliciter;́ The Unboundedness of the Fulfilment; Appendix: In Defence of the Common Sense; References; Chapter 7: Transcendental Phenomenology?; The Phenomena of Phenomenology; Husserlś Transcendental Phenomenology and Its Opponents; The Questioning, Intuiting, and World Acquainted Phenomenologist; Phenomenology as an Eidetic Science of Transcendental Consciousness; References

Chapter 8: Neo-Aristotelian Ethics: Naturalistic or PhenomenologicalReferences; Chapter 9: Phenomenal Experience and the Scope of Phenomenology: A Husserlian Response to Some Wittgensteinean Remarks; Introduction; Wittgensteinean Temptations; Phenomenality and Logic; Phenomenology and Empirical Being; Conclusion: Phenomenology as a Discipline; References; Chapter 10: Thinking Fast: Freedom, Expertise, and Solicitation; Freedom; Expertise; Solicitations; Conclusion; Chapter 11: Aristotle and Phenomenology; Seeing as a Philosophical Theme; Seeing as Intentional Consciousness (Husserl)

Seeing as Language (phunē sēmantikē)Seeing as aisthēsis; The Falsity of Seeing; Conclusion; References; About the Contributors; Index

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