- Page 1 and 2: HUSSERL’S MARGINAL NOTES TO HEIDE
- Page 3 and 4: 1. PAGE AND LINE REFERENCES: Four p
- Page 5 and 6: gespannt (SZ 423.30-31): stretched
- Page 7 and 8: HUSSERL’S MARGINAL REMARKS in MAR
- Page 9 and 10: The cover and opening pages of SZ-1
- Page 11 and 12: The inside of the bookcover (front
- Page 13 and 14: The first inner page (flyleaf) / in
- Page 15 and 16: Title page / Haupttitelblatt A. Rec
- Page 17 and 18: TABLE OF CONTENTS viii.39 viii.38 9
- Page 20 and 21: INTRODUCTION EXPOSITION OF THE QUES
- Page 22 and 23: In the left margin: Are these, too,
- Page 24 and 25: 10.17S11.2 10.18-11.3 30.22-31.12 8
- Page 26 and 27: 11.17-19 11.18-20 31.25-27 9.27-31
- Page 28: existence 43 Husserl’s second not
- Page 31 and 32: INTRODUCTION CHAPTER TWO The Twofol
- Page 33 and 34: Text in SZ: “”[The analytic of
- Page 35 and 36: adical posing of the question? 54 2
- Page 37: 28.31-35 28.31-36 51.13-15 25.13-17
- Page 41 and 42: Husserl underlines: “the being of
- Page 43 and 44: PART ONE THE INTERPRETATION OF DASE
- Page 45 and 46: “...an analysis of this entity is
- Page 47 and 48: 47.10 47.10 73.7 44.20-23 Text in S
- Page 49 and 50: “Mineness belongs to existent Das
- Page 51 and 52: In the right margin, in cursive: co
- Page 53: § 13 Being-in is Exemplified in a
- Page 56 and 57: DIVISION ONE CHAPTER THREE The Worl
- Page 58 and 59: 65.22-24 65.20-22 93.30-32 61.21-23
- Page 60 and 61: “‘things’” In the right mar
- Page 62 and 63: Text in SZ: “However, in a distur
- Page 64 and 65: In the left margin: establishing a
- Page 66 and 67: § 18 Involvement and Significance:
- Page 68 and 69: B. The Contrast of Our Analysis of
- Page 70 and 71: In the left margin: N.B. 98.38-40 9
- Page 72 and 73: C. The Lived Spatiality of a Lived
- Page 74: § 23 The Spatiality of Being-in-a-
- Page 77 and 78: In the left margin, in cursive: Who
- Page 79 and 80: In the right margin, the second in
- Page 81 and 82: “But it is clear that this seemin
- Page 83 and 84: 128.32-34 128.31-33 166.26-28 120.3
- Page 85 and 86: up in itself as being-in-a-world S
- Page 87 and 88: asic-form of the co-original disclo
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§ 30 Fear as a Mode of Disposition
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146.1-4 146.1-4 186.6-9 137.1-4 Tex
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150.24-26 150.22-25 191.21-24 141.8
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161.13-14 161.13-14 204.8-9 151.2-3
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something and being cognitively in
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195.25 195.25 240.6 182.22 Text in
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B. Reality as an Ontological Proble
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Text in SZ: “Of course, being
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succeeded in demonstrating that Das
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DIVISION TWO CHAPTER ONE The Possib
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“death’s certainty S that it is
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§ 54 The Problem of How an Authent
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Husserl underlines ((SZ-1 271.39):
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285.5-11 285.6-12 331.3-10 262.41S2
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N.B. 288.40S298.1 288.40S289.1 335.
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Husserl notes this passage above by
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298.15-18 298.14-17 344.36-39 274.3
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§ 61 A Preliminary Sketch of the M
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In the left margin, quite large: ?
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“One presupposes not too much but
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Text in SZ: “But why is it that K
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In the right margin: N.B. 323.28-32
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328.41S329.2 329.1-3 377.11-14 302.
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DIVISION TWO CHAPTER FOUR Temporali
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In the left margin: 262 154 337.6 3
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Text in SZ: “Understanding is nev
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345.8-11 345.8-11 395.25-28 317.2-5
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349.25-29 349.25-29 400.36-40 320.3
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354.17-20 354.16-19 405.24-28 324.3
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Ontological genesis of the theoreti
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epresentations.’” In the right
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? 363.13-16 363.13-17 414.34-38 332
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Text in SZ: “We call this
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ekstatically occupied space, it is
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constituted as an extending [Erstre
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§ 73 The Ordinary Understanding of
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thrown back onto its factical
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387.14-17 387.13-16 439.12-15 353.4
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present, and disappears.” In the
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In the margin: Why [is] constitutiv
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Within-time-ness and the Genesis of
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425.1-4 424.35-37 477.12-14 389.10-
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§ 82 The Contrast between the Exis
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End of Husserl’s Marginalia to Se