EN
The paper is an attempt to show how Patocka has come to the terms with Husserl on a critical basis. His metaphysical criticism concerns Husserl's system represented by his concept of the living world, as well as by his method, the phenomenological reduction. On one side Patocka's criticism discovers the less known side of Husserl, on the other side it shows Patocka's own limitations in appropriating the motifs found already in Husserl (the ontological limits of reduction, noematic phenomenology). Nevertheless, Patocka's criticism is at the same time a creative interpretation of the founding father of phenomenology.