The paper explores the role of phenomenological psychology in Edmund Husserl's method. Generally speaking, the phenomenological psychology is more or less neglected due to the impression that Husserl is mainly concerned with transcendental phenomenology. The investigation concentrates, on the one hand, the significance of phenomenological psychology in Husserl, explaining the different meanings of reduction in phenomenological psychology as well as in transcendental phenomenology. On the other hand, with the idea of ”personalisitc attitude” in Ideen Ⅱ, the paper endeavors to fix the position of phenomenological psychology in Husserl's thought.
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