Abstract
One of the many recent endeavors to carry phenomenology beyond the programmatic stage, this book makes extensive and illuminating use of unpublished Husserl manuscripts dealing with the constitution of visual and tactile space. It thus illustrates the ways in which detailed phenomenological analyses of the Husserlian variety can help in clarifying certain problems, while ignoring others, such as the perceptual problems of causality, illusions, etc., that are bypassed by the suspension of the "general thesis" of existence. Besides a consideration of the problems of the constitution of space, there are discussions of such general phenomenological concepts as "world," "essence," and "hyle," whose meaning and interrelation are unclear until related to specific problems, as the author shows.—J. J.