Search
Search Results
-
Phenomenological Reduction and the Nature of Perceptual Experience
Interpretations abound about Husserl’s understanding of the relationship between veridical perceptual experience and hallucination. Some read him as...
-
Patient autonomy, clinical decision making, and the Phenomenological reduction
Phenomenology gives rise to certain ontological considerations that have far-reaching implications for standard conceptions of patient autonomy in...
-
The Phenomenological Reduction and the Transformation of Phenomenology
Husserl saw himself as a constant beginner in phenomenology. Indeed, his work can be seen as a repeated set of “introductions” to phenomenology. The... -
The Incomplete Reduction
Merleau-Ponty famously states in the Preface that phenomenology’s greatest insight is that the phenomenological reduction cannot be completed. This... -
The epistemic harms of empathy in phenomenological psychopathology
Jaspers identifies empathic understanding as an essential tool for gras** not the mere psychic content of the condition at hand, but the lived...
-
The Phenomenological Method
Here, I discuss in broader detail what I think phenomenologists do. I try to defend a relatively “classical” phenomenology that attempts to... -
The genesis of the minimal mind: elements of a phenomenological and functional account
In this article, we endeavour to lay the theoretical fundaments of a phenomenologically based project regarding the origins of conscious experience...
-
Phenomenological Science
In this Chapter, a distinction between phenomenological and theoretical science is introduced. The former establishes causal knowledge, which can be... -
Phenomenological explanation: towards a methodological integration in phenomenological psychopathology
Whether, and in what sense, research in phenomenology and phenomenological psychopathology has—in addition to its descriptive and hermeneutic...
-
Phenomenological interviews in learning and teaching phenomenological approach in psychiatry
Today, there is a considerable interest in phenomenology within psychiatric academic communities as well as among clinical practitioners; as a...
-
Phenomenological Reduction and Suspension of Objective Time
In this chapter I focus on certain methodological issues, i.e., on questions regarding the proper ways of carrying out a phenomenological description... -
Phenomenological Methods and some Retooling
What methods are used by phenomenologists? This chapter explains the ‘natural attitude’ and reviews the classic methodological steps involved in... -
On the Personal, Intersubjective, and Metaphysical Senses of Death: An Inquiry into Edmund Husserl’s Transcendental Phenomenological Approach to Death
In this short study, I attempt to reconstruct the main conceptual components of Edmund Husserl’s concept of death following the leading clue of his...
-
Meaning-Adequacy and Social Critique: Toward a Phenomenological Critical Theory
In the present paper, I analyze the complex relationship of tension between Critical Theory and phenomenology from a sociological-theoretical...
-
Back to the technologies themselves: phenomenological turn within postphenomenology
This paper revives phenomenological elements to have a better framework for addressing the implications of technologies on society. For this reason,...
-
Conclusion: Phenomenological Intentionality and Looking-Glass Sociality
This conclusion explains the connectedness of various provinces of meaning with each other and the way in which the non-social features of various... -
Essentialism, historicity, and ethicalization: rethinking Husserl’s project of phenomenological theology
Husserl’s conception of theology and God is a lesser noticed aspect in his phenomenological system. This paper is devoted to a return to Husserl’s...
-
Kracauer: The Birth of Dialectics from Phenomenological Sociology
The present chapter analyses the works of Siegfried Kracauer by primarily tackling his early engagement with phenomenological sociology. A decade... -
An eyewitness account of Edmund Husserl and Freiburg phenomenology in 1923–24. Towards reclaiming the plurivocity of historical sources of the Phenomenological Movement
The early phenomenologist József Somogyi was one of, if not the first to write a monograph specifically dedicated to the history of the nascent...
-
What Does a Phenomenological Theory of Social Objects Mean?
What are social objects and what makes them different from other realms of scientifically studied reality? How can sociology theoretically account...