In the first part of her book Bozga argues that Husserl\'s phenomenology makes room for what she calls ‘a phenomenology on singuarlity\'.
This comes to light when studying Husserl\'s account of sensuous hyle, the individual, the transcendental Ego and the world.
In the first part of her book Bozga argues that Husserl\'s phenomenology makes room for what she calls ‘a phenomenology on singuarlity\'