Abstract
The editors, Thomas Nenon and Hans Rainer Sepp, of Husserl's Aufsdtze
und Vortri~ge (1922-1937) (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1989) have given us a
fascinating present with quite a few surprises. I would like to take this
occasion to thank them publicly for their able and selfless labors. Here we
have Husserl attempting to address himself to a large philosophically
untrained audience for funds of which he had dire need: he had two children
getting married and the real value of his inflated German annual income
was worth $160.00. But, as he told a friend, what he was doing was as
genuine philosophical work as what he would do for his Jahrbuch ffir
Philosophie und phginomenologische Forschung. In many ways it is
regrettable the work did not come to full fruition for the publication in the
Jahrbuch because then the tensions and ambiguities we find here would
have been perhaps less severe.