Contents:
Husserl and the Transcendental Ego 1. The Transcendental Ego and the Epoché
2. The 'Discovery' of the Transcendental Ego
3. Directedness
4. Indubitability
5. By no means whatever something mysterious or mystical
6. Numerical Identity Over Time
7. Necessity
8. Transcendency within Immanency
The I and the Me Summary
The Theory of the Formal Presence of the I
1. Sartre on Kant's 'I think' Doctrine
2. Is Kant's 'I think' Doctrine True?
3. Is Kant's 'I think' Doctrine Purely Formal?
4. Hypostatisation
5. Subjectivity and Synthesis
6. The Unity of Conciousness
7. Sartre's Holism
8. Consciousness Makes Itself
9. Individuality
10. Pre-Reflective Consciousness
11. Conciousness Without the I
12. Consciousness With the I
13. Sartre's Cogito
14. Sartre's Retentions
15. Positional Consciousness^l 16. The Me
17. The Phenomenology of the I
18. The Ego and the Epoché
19. Consciousness and the I
20. Why the I is not the Source of Consciousness
21. Sartre's Conclusions on 'the I and the Me'
The Theory of the Material Presence of the Me Summary
1. Sartre's Criticisms of La Rochefoucauld
2. The Autonomy of Unreflected Consciousness
3. The Constitution of the Ego
4. Consciousness and the Ego
5. The Constitution of Actions
6. The Ego as the Pole of Actions, States and Qualities
7. The Ego-World Analogy
8. Sartre and the Evil Genius
9. The Certainty of the Cogito
10. Poetic Production
11. Interiority
12. The Structure of the Interiority of the Ego
13. Self-Knowledge
14. The Ego as Ideal
15. The Ego and Reflection
16. The I and Consciousness in the Ego
Conclusions 1. A Correct Transcendental Phenomenology
2. The Refutation of Solipsism
3. A Non-Idealist Phenomenology Which Provides a Foundation for Ethics and Politics
4. Subject-Object Dualism
5. Absolute Interiority: Towards a Phenomenology of the Soul