Husserl's problem was that although he saw the transcendental dimension of consciousness (aka ālayavijñāna in Yogācāra Buddhism), he was blind to its transcendent dimension (aka vijñānamātratva, nirvāṇa, śūnyatā, tathātā, tathāgatagarbha, dharmakāya, dharmadhātu, etc. in Yogācāra Buddhism) — transcendent consciousness-in-itself, the non-dichotomic Light of mystical/transpersonal experiences — whose "universal wavefunction" (a mathematical description of infinite potential) is "collapsed" by transcendental (inter)subjectivity down to the stream of particular states (hence mathematical "quantum states") of phenomenal consciousness/objectivity. Thus, although Husserl saw the truth of transcendental idealism, he was blind to the truth of ontological idealism — the truth that Consciousness is all there is.
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