[PART THREE: TWENTY AMERICAN YEARS]
I. Adaptation and Integration
II. Intellectual Continuities
III. Old World Community
IV. New World Influences
V. Activities and Undertakings
Preliminary Notes
I. Adaptation and Integration
Chapter 12
Resettlement
Adaptation
:Business Activities :Setting Up the Routine of Everyday Life
:Civic Integration
The War Effort
:Reaction to the War :Economic Warfare
:Austrian Economists to the Fore
:Schutz and the Federal Reserve System
:Schutz and the Board of Economic Warfare
Intellectual Distance
:Academic Integration :Scholarly Non-Integration
:The European Tradition: Refuge and Contribution
:Import and Immigration :Academic Life from a Distance
:Scholar at Night
Chapter 13 Difficulty of Scholarly Integration: Encounter with Parsons
A First Exposition of Schutz's Approach
:Schutz into English :"A New Approach" :The Missing Follow-Up
In Search of Scholarly Contacts
:Willingness and Preconditions
Encounter with Parsons
:Talcott Parsons :Parsons Comes into Schutz's Field of Vision
:Rationality Not Action: A Delayed Discussion
:Failure of a Discussion :The Relative Importance of the Vehicle
:The Missing Dialogue
Fiasko of a Scholarly Discussion
:Schutz's Essay on Parsons :Parsons' Response
:Schutz Answer Parsons :Mutual Frustration
Subjective and Objective Factors of the Failure of a Discussion
:Personality Factors :Moving in Opposite Directions
:Parsons and Weber :No Permanent Hostility
:Schutz and Parsons' Later Work :The Fate of an Essay
Footnotes
Chapter 14 Scholarly Acceptance: Successful Collaboration in Philosophical Endeavor
First Philosophical Contacts
:Marvin Farber :The Husserl Memorial Volume
The International Phenomenological Society
:Establishment of the Society
:Framework of the American Philosophical Association
:Schutz and the Philosophical Association :The Next Years
:Buffalo and Louvain :Organized Phenomenology in Europe
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
:A Major Source :Launching a Journal :Farber as Editor
:Schutz as Co-Editor
Schutz and Farber
:Rare Personal Contacts :Philosophy: Technical Cooperation
:Scholarly Respect
Politics and Tensions
:Philosophical Issues :Editorial Policies
:Russian Articles in Translation :A Conflict
:Space Allocations :Farber and Schutz :Concluding Remark
Footnotes
II. Intellectual Continuities
The Sociological Heritage
Bergsonian Support
Philosophers in Conjunction
Husserlian Anchorage
Schutz and Husserl: Delimitation and Critique
The Problem of Intersubjectivity
A Personal and a Philosophical Relationship
Chapter 15 Fundamental Continuities: The European Heritage in the American Setting
A: The Sociological Heritage
Max Weber
:Confirmation of Weber :Subjective and Objective Interpretation
:Methodological Points :Wertfreiheit
Other German Sociologists
:Wilhelm Dithey :Georg Simmel
Max Scheler
:Scheler's Place :The Essays on Scheler
:Appraisal of Scheler's Philosophy
French Sociologist
:Emile Durkheim :The Durkheimians
B: The Philosophical Heritage
A Wide Historical Range
:Greek Philosophers :The Stoics and Skeptics
:Medieval Thoughts :Rene Descartes :Gottfried W. Leibniz
:Immanuel Kant :Soren Kierkegaard
:Other Earlier European Philosophers :Concluding Remark
Footnotes
Chapter 16 Fundamental Continuities: Bergsonian Support
A: Limits of a Contribution
Bergson in Focus
:Bergson References :Reconfirmations :Bergson: Originator
:Theory of Choice :Toward the Critique of Bergson
Santayana versus Bergson
:Target: Bergson :Santayana versus Bergson
Kallen's Critique of Bergson
:James not Bergson James, Bergson, and Kallen
Schutz and the Critique of Bergson
:Vicarious Critique :Schutz to the Defense
:A Schutzian Critique of Santayana :Recognition of Kallen
:A Schutzian Critique of Kallen
Concluding Remarks
B: Philosophers in Conjunction
The Collective Foundation Beneath an Individual's Philosophy
:Schutz in and on Philosophical Configurations
:Two Philosophical Sources and Others :Bergson Plus
:Husserl and Bergson :Confluence
Footnotes
Intermediary Notes: Husserl in Schutz's American Work [Summary of Chaps 17-20]
The Sources and the Problem
:Husserl's Literature :Husserl References
:The Areas of Exposition
Husserl in Schutz's Perspective
:Schutz among Phenomenologists :Responsibilities and Limitations
Chapter 17 Fundamental Continuities: Husserlian Anchorage
Life-World
:Natural Stance :Life-world in Central Focus
Working and Practical Intelligence
:The Social World of Working :Life-World Cognition
Generalization and Typification
:Classification :Typification by Husserl
:Typification by Schutz
Theory of Systematic Reasoning and Science
:The First Exploration of the Origins of Logic
:A Second Exploration of the Origins of logic
:Husserl on the Origins of Geometry
:Science in the Krisis Studies :Social Science by Schutz
:Social Science out of Husserl
Footnotes
Chapter 18 Schutz and Husserl: Delimitation and Critique
A: Limits of Acceptance
The 'Structure' of Phenomenology
:Husserl's Body of Philosophy
:Husserl's Phenomenologies and their Interlinkage :Delimination
The Eidetic Sphere
:Eidetic Investigation :Empirical and Eidetic Science
:Empirical and Eidetic Psychology
B: Critique
Dual Approach
:Double-Barreled Criticism
(1) Corrective Criticism
:The Sphere of Experience :Experience of Choosing and of Time
:Phenomenological Method : Typification: A Postponed Rediscussion
(2) Basic Disagreement
Transcendentalism
:The Parts and the Whole of Husserl's Philosophy
:Transcendentalism Phenomenology
Critique of the Baseline
:From Doubt to Suspension :Critical Distantiation
:A Weakness of the Baseline
Critique of Eidetics
:Operational Concepts
:Intentionality: Construction of Meaning or Construction of Objects
:Eidos and Typification
Critique of Egology
:Husserl's Early Egology :Reaction and Continuation
Critique of Transcendentalism
:Trans-Subjectivity in the Social Realm
:Trans-Subjectivity in the Philosophical Realm :Metaphysics
:An Anti-Anthropological Paper
:Ingarden's Confirmation of Schutz's Critique
Conclusion to Chap.18
Footnotes
Chapter 19 The Problem of Intersubjectivity
:Introductory Remark :On the Use of the Term: Problem
:On the Use of the Term: Intersubjectivity
:Intersubjectivity as Problem of transcendental Phenomenology
:Husserl's Pursuit of the Problem
A: Intersubjectivity: Conception into Problem
Schutz and Husserl's Conceptions of Intersubjectivity
:Preoccupation of a Quarter-of-a-Century
1940: A Matter of Dialectic Balance
1942: The First Critical Move: From the Critique of Scheler to the
Critique of Husserl
1945: Intermediary Remainders
1948: The Second Critical Move: The Critique of Sartre and Husserl's
Theory of the Other
1952: Two Critiques: Right and Wrong
1953: Response to Idea II
:Pessimism and Anger :Rejection and Acceptance
B: Intersubjectivity: Problem into Attack
The Rayaumont Paper
:Essay upon Invitation
:1957: The Third Critical Move: Frontal Assault on Husserl
The Royaumont Discussion
:Three Comments and Three Replies :Ingarden
:An Interchange: Fink and Schutz
C: Intersubjectivity: The Late Efforts
Ortega y Gasset
:Ortega :Schutz and Ortega :Man and People
:Ortega and Schutz :Response by Schutz
A Last Critical Advance of Theory
:Hic Egregie Progressus Sum
:The Social Dimension of the Inner-Horizonal Structure and its Relevances
:The Inner-Horizonal Time-Dimension of the Future and its Relevances
:The Outer Horizon of Sociality
:The Historical Dimension of Social Life
:Revision of the Theory of Relevances
1958: The Last Critique of Husserl: Voiding the Idealization of Everyday Life?
:"And So Forth"
D: Mundane Intersubjectivity
Intersubjectivity in Everyday Experience
:The Primacy of Mundane Experience
:The Issue: Mundane Intersubjectivity
:A Theory of Intersubjectivity for the Social Sciences
:The General Thesis of the Alter Ego :Additional Aspects
E: The Puzzle of a Theoretical Failure
Comments in Retrospect
:The Puzzle of Internal Coherence
:Partial Bracketing of the Natural Stance?
Footnotes
Chapter 20 A Personal and Philosophical Relationship
Personal Loyalty and Willing Recognition
:Respect and Esteem :Defense of Husserl
:Continuous Recognition of Husserl's Contributions
The Critical Pursuit of Phenomenology
:System or Method:No Phenomenological Orthodoxy
:A Critical Phenomenologist
Footnotes