Abstract
This very ambitious and remarkably detailed book examines some of the
most fundamental themes in Husserl's philosophy. As is evident from the
title, the book has two parts, the first of which (pp. 1-101) discusses
Husserl's methodology, esp. the phenomenological reduction, and the
second of which (pp. 103-347) investigates the themes of space, time, and
other. These themes are selected because they are central to our mundane
and embodied experience of an objective, physical and animate world