Intro
Examples
key terms
100

When was the concept of phenomenology developed and who was the founding father?

 It was developed in the early 20th century and the founding father was Edmund Husserl

100

Would this be an accurate example of phenomenology? why/why not?

A scientist conducts a series of experiments to objectively measure the temperature of a substance.

Phenomenology is not concerned with objective, empirical data or external measurements, but with how things appear in subjective experience. The focus of phenomenology is not on objective reality but on personal, lived experience.

100

what is the definition of intentionality?

Intentionality: This refers to the idea that consciousness is always "about" something. Every act of consciousness (such as thinking, perceiving, or feeling) is directed towards an object or content, whether it be an external object, an idea, or a feeling.

200

What is the definition of phenomenology?

Phenomenology is a philosophical method and movement that examines the structures of experience and consciousness

200

When reading a book, a phenomenological study might explore how the text appears to you in terms of meaning, engagement, and emotion. It would look at the intentionality of your consciousness: how your mind is directed towards the words on the page, how you interpret the narrative, and how different experiences come into 

this is true because phenomenology is measured on the study of structures of experience and consciousness. 

200

What does the term essence mean?

Essence: In phenomenology, the essence refers to the fundamental nature of a phenomenon as it appears in experience. The goal is to uncover the essential qualities that make something what it is, by examining the structures of experience in their purest form.

300

What is the core idea of phenomenology?

The core idea of phenomenology is that all human experience is shaped by subjective perception, and it emphasizes the importance of understanding these experiences from the first-person perspective.

300

In the context of a conversation, phenomenology would focus on how we experience the exchange on a personal level—how you perceive the other person’s body language, tone of voice, and emotional state. It would also explore how you interpret the meaning of their words and how your own feelings and thoughts emerge as the conversation unfolds.

phenomenology might examine how an individual perceives being misunderstood or the unique sense of connection when they feel truly heard.

300

what does the term Epoché (Bracketing) mean?

Epoché (Bracketing): A method of suspending or "bracketing" all assumptions, judgments, and preconceived beliefs about the world. By doing so, phenomenologists aim to look at experience in its purest form, focusing solely on how things appear to consciousness without any external or theoretical influences.

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