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phenomenology

[ US /fəˈnɑməˌnɑɫɑˌɡi/ ]
[ UK /fɪnˌɒmɪnˈɒləd‍ʒi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a philosophical doctrine proposed by Edmund Husserl based on the study of human experience in which considerations of objective reality are not taken into account

How To Use phenomenology In A Sentence

  • Holzner however describes the cognitive processes of the individual, borrowing both from cognitive psychology and from the phenomenology of Merleau-Ponty.
  • They're also looking right now for what they call dual phenomenology. CNN Transcript Oct 9, 2006
  • Here Nishida might have further developed a phenomenology of the agency of predication, but instead he moves to a more logical account of its scope and developed what he called a predicate logic. Nishida Kitarô
  • SBG: the word "unutterable" also occurs in heel's phenomenology of spirit, page 66: "what is called the unutterable is nothing else than the untrue, the irrational, what is merely meant [but is not actually expressed]. FallNews - Unreadable.....
  • Before Einstein, who asserted the radical inextricability of spacetime from the universe itself; and quantum physicists, who showed that there is no such thing as perfectly empty space; Romantic poets, with their figuration of atmosphere, and Romantic philosophers, with their interest in phenomenology, asserted the radical in-ness of reality. 'Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star' as an Ambient Poem; a Study of a Dialectical Image; with Some Remarks on Coleridge and Wordsworth
  • The result was strong representationalism about all experiential phenomenology, according to which the entire phenomenal (qualitative) content or qualia of any experience is metaphysically constituted without remainder by its representational content. Pain
  • For such reasons as these Heidegger believes that ontology and phenomenology coincide.
  • In psychoanalytic terms, this is the process whereby the subject's phenomenology may be transferred to the researcher.
  • Phenomenology requires rigorous investment into respectfully, appreciatively, and acceptingly making evident our lived worlds and their ramifications for the now, the past, and the anticipated future. Humanistic Nursing
  • At the most there exist some indications -- e.g. in Morselli's masterly work (2) -- of the existence of some concordances between the phenomenology of mediumism and hysterical, hysteroid, or at least "sensitive" temperaments. Lola or, The Thought and Speech of Animals
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