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  1. 16. Nov. 2003 · 1. What is Phenomenology? 2. The Discipline of Phenomenology. 3. From Phenomena to Phenomenology. 4. The History and Varieties of Phenomenology. 5. Phenomenology and Ontology, Epistemology, Logic, Ethics. 6. Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind. 7. Phenomenology in Contemporary Consciousness Theory. Bibliography. Classical Texts.

    • Schutz, Alfred

      3.5 Phenomenology. Schutz’s philosophical targeting of the...

    • Reinach, Adolf

      Other Internet Resources. Adolf Reinach, 1914, “Concerning...

  2. 5. Apr. 2019 · This article aims to explain phenomenology by reviewing the key philosophical and methodological differences between two of the major approaches to phenomenology: transcendental and hermeneutic. Understanding the ontological and epistemological assumptions underpinning these approaches is essential for successfully conducting ...

    • Brian E. Neubauer, Catherine T. Witkop, Lara Varpio
    • 2019
  3. 2. Mai 2024 · Phenomenology, a philosophical movement originating in the 20th century, the primary objective of which is the direct investigation and description of phenomena as consciously experienced, without theories about their causal explanation and as free as possible from unexamined preconceptions and

  4. Phenomenology is the philosophical study of objectivity and reality (more generally) as subjectively lived and experienced. It seeks to investigate the universal features of consciousness while avoiding assumptions about the external world, aiming to describe phenomena as they appear to the subject , and to explore the meaning and ...

  5. phenomenology can be seen as an attempt to understand what experience is and means, and is, in its classical form, a formalized account of conscious experience and its implications. However, how this attempt is done and what is called phenomenology is not a rigid school or uniform philosophical discipline with an undisputed set of dogmas ...

  6. 11. März 2021 · As phenomenology moved in new directions—for example, exploring the structure of the self, historical experience, aesthetic experience, and the various phenomena of sociality—it began to integrate “hermeneutic” elements into its practice, as in Husserl’s famous “zig-zag” method for uncovering historical sedimentations of meaning.

  7. The philosophical orientation of Gadamerian hermeneutic phenomenology is explored in this paper. Gadamer offers a hermeneutics of the humanities that differs significantly from models of the human sciences historically rooted in scientific methodologies.