ABSTRACT

In 1905 Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) gave a series of lectures on the phenomenology of time consciousness. These lectures, modified in ensuing years,1 contain the nucleus of attempts adequately to describe appearing time as appearing. Husserl thought the problems regarding such descriptions among the most difficult and important in phenomenology.2 For the consciousness of immanent time embraces all lived experiences, combining them in a unity.3