[PART TWO]�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@[revised Mid-June, 1985]

Chapter 7�@Reorientation and Redirection: The Phase of Crystallization

�@�@The Friend as Challenger

�@�@�@�FFelix Kaufmann�@�@�FKaufmann and Schutz

�@�@Focus on Husserl

�@�@�@�FDisappointment and Rejection�@ �@�@�FThe Turn toward Husserl (11)

�@�@Work of the Inter-Period

�@�@�@�FLectures at the Mises Seminar

�@�@�@�FPragmatic Conduct and Sociological Knowledge

�@�@�@�FFormations and Relations

�@�@�@�FLaw in Social Sciences and Understanding

�@�@�@�FSelected Complementary Problems�@�@ �@�FAn Over-All Survey

�@�@Transitional Lectures

�@�@�@�FEconomists as Social Scientists�@�@�FA Fragment on Social Sciences

�@�@�@�FGuidelines on Understanding and Action

�@�@�@�FA Lecture on Understanding and Action�@ �FAn Exploration of the Joke

�@�@�@�FThe Teiresias Motif

�@�@Footnotes

 

Chapter 8�@Execution and Realization: Open Project into Defining Study

�@�@From a Tentative to a Definite Structure

�@�@�@�FComparison of Two Outlines: Individual Aspects of Consciousness

�@�@�@�FComparison of Two Outlines: Social Relations�@ �FA General Appraisal

�@�@Foundations of an Intellectual Edifice

�@�@�@�FWeberian Substance�@ �@�FPhilosophical Substratum

�@�@�@�FThe Bergson-Husserl Contribution�@�@�@�FThe Weber-Husserl Connection

�@�@Husserl Foundations

�@�@�@�FThe Sources�@ �FNote on Terminology�@�@ �FLogic and Time

�@�@�@�FSubjective Time Experience and Objective Time Conception�@�@�FIdea I

�@�@�@�FFormal and Transcendental Logic and the Cartesian Meditations

�@�@Husserlian Supports

�@�@�@�FPhenomenological Psychology�@�@�@ �FTopics and Presuppositions(30)

�@�@�@�FBasic Points�@�@�@�FMeaning and Action�@�@�FIntersubjectivity

�@�@�@�FUnderstanding-Communication-Signs�@�@ �@�FScience

�@�@Writing and Publication

�@�@�@�FA Book�@�@�@�FA Book Dictated�@�@�@ �FEncourage and Help

�@�@�@�FSchutz and Kaufmann

�@�@A Japanese Friend

�@�@�@�FTomoo Otaka�@ �@�@�FEarly Japanese Phenomenology

�@�@�@�FOtaka: The Scholar�@�@�@�FSchutz and Otaka

�@�@Additional Note

�@�@Footnotes

 

Chapter 9�@Scholarship and Pressure

�@�@Schutz and Husserl: A Personal Relationship

�@�@�@�FResponses to Schutz's Book�@�@ �FHusserl and Schutz: An Encounter

�@�@�@�FA Philosophical and Personal Relationship

�@�@�@�FA Rudimentary Correspondence�@�FSchutz and Phenomenology

�@�@Between Methodology and Phenomenology

�@�@�@�FA Precarious Scholarly Relationship�@�@�FScholarly Gains

�@�@�@�FKaufmann's Methodology�@�FPre-Phenomenological Theory of Science?

�@�@�@�FWeber's and Kaufmann's Theories of Meaning

�@�@�@�FThe Concept of Ideal Type�@ �FKaufmann's Consideration of Schutz

�@�@Schutz and Machlup

�@�@�@�FFritz Machlup�@�@�FTrust and Confidences�@ �FScholarly Contacts

�@�@Mounting Pressures

�@�@�@�FDespair�@ �FSocial Science: Incompetence and Capitulation

�@�@�@�FAmbulant Business Activities

�@�@Scholarship in Adversity

�@�@�@�FMinor Publications�@�@�FUnfinished Attempts

�@�@The Hayek Manuscript

�@�@�@�FLevels of Political Economy

�@�@  �FThe 'Data' of Everyday Life and of Political Economy

�@�@�@�FObjective and Subjective Method�@ �FThought Models and Ideal Types

�@�@�@�FThe Apriority of Economic Theory

�@�@�@�FThe Marginal Principle and the Economic Equilibrium

�@�@Footnotes

 

Chapter 10�@Continuation of a Major Scholarly Effort

�@�@The Problems of Personality in the Social World

�@�@�@�FThe Manuscript of 1936 and 1937�@�@�@�FCombined Representation

�@�@�@�FThe Planned Scope of the Study�@�@�@ �FThe Substantive Exposition

�@�@�@�FThe Introduction

�@�@Broadening of the Philosophical Basis

�@ �@ �FFocus on Kierlegaard�@�@�FFocus on Leibniz

�@�@Partial Personalities and the Unity of the Person

�@�@�@�FThe Basic Problem of Social Personalities

�@�@  �FAspects of Discontinuity�@�@�FSocial Roles and Social Personalities

�@�@�@�FThe Ego as Center of the Social World and his Attitudes

�@�@�@�FPartial Personalities and the 'Schizophrenic' Ego

�@�@�@�FThe Unity of Self as Problem Phenomenological Psychology

�@�@�@�FThe General Thesis of the Ego himself (Ego Ipse)

�@�@�@�FThe Unity of the Body�@�@�@�FTemporality

�@�@�@�FThe Possibility of the Unitary Ego

�@�@The Temporal-Spatial Structures of the Ego and the Working World

�@�@�@�FThe Social Person�@�@ �FThe Time Perspectives of the Ego

�@�@�@�FAccess to the Working World

�@�@�@�FThe Expansion of the Reality of Working World

�@�@�@�FThe Quasi-Spatial Dimensions of Personality in the Working World

�@�@�@�FThe Working World: The Life-World

�@�@Other Realms of Meaning

�@�@�@�FWorld Modified

�@ �@ �FThe Theoretical World of Contemplative Reflection

�@�@The Social Dimension

�@�@The Topic of Intersubjectivity�@�@�FThe Methodological Focus

�@�@�@�FThe Project of 1936-1937

�@�@Footnotes

 

Chapter 11�@Dislocation

�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@�@A: Parisian Exile

�@�@Downhill Course

�@�@�FThe End of Austrian Democracy�@�@�@�FExodus of Liberal Intellectuals

�@�@�@�FToward the End of Intellectual Freedom�@�@ �FEnd of the Circles

�@�@Fifteen Months in Paris

�@�@�@�FTransfer to Paris�@�@�@ �FHectic Months

�@�@  �FPolitical Outlook: Hopeless

�@�@Intellectual Life Suspended

�@�@�@�FScholarship at Rock Bottom�@�@�FThe Rift with Kaufmann

�@�@Encounter with Gurwitsch

�@�@�@�FAron Gurwitsch (1901-1973)�@�@�@�FGurwitsch's Theme

�@�@�@�FGurwitsch's Approach to the Ego

�@�@�@�FSchutz and Gurwitsch: First Contact--First Encounter

�@�@Footnote to Chap 11, Part A

�@�@�@

�@�@�@�@�@�@B: In Search of a New Country

�@�@The Fate of a Business Enterprise as Personal Fate

�@�@�@�FSkanning the Field�@�@ �FExploring the New Continent

�@�@�@�FContingency Preparations�@�@ �FTemporal Transfer?

�@�@�@�FBetween Two Continents

�@�@Footnotes to Chap 11, Part B

�@�@Conclusion to Part Two

�@�@[�ȉ��F�}���ӏ��s��: however must be a part of Chap.11.]

�@�@Contacts with French Intellectuals

�@�@Louis Rougier

�@�@�@�FRougier�@�@�FRougier and Schutz�@�@ �FIntermediary Remark

�@�@Raymond Aron

�@�@�@�FAron's Intellectual Life and Work�@�@ �FKnowledge and Self

�@�@�@�FKnowledge of Others�@ �FActor and Scientific Observer

�@�@�@�FKnowledge of Self and Others�@�@�FUnfinished Exposition

�@�@�@�FToward the Societal Level�@ �FSchutz and Aron