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Logical Investigations (1901), several thinkers were developing phenomenologies quite independently of him. One such thinker was Max Scheler.1 Contrary to the claims of much secondary literature,2 Scheler was in no way a "student" of Husserl but had already worked out the foundations of his own phenomenology before reading any text of Husserl. 3 He suggested a notion of phenomenology not entirely inconsistent with that of Husserl but, in the opinion of this writer, much broader and containing vastly richer possibilities for human self-understanding." />
pp. 129-151
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