phenomenology according to husserl - Search
  1. The relevance of Husserl’s phenomenological exploration of …

    • From the very beginning of his career Edmund Husserl (1859–1938) was interested in the epistemological problem of how we obtain objective knowledge.2 What distinguished Husserl’s writin… See more

    Abstract

    Phenomenology represents a detailed and systematic attempt to understand theSee more

    Nature
    Introduction

    Noli foras ire, in te redi, in interiore homine habitat veritas. St. Augustine De Vera Religione, XXXIX. 72
    Since the time of Descartes philosophers have sough… See more

    Nature
    Subjective experience and objective categories: Husserl’s movement to the transcendental

    Originally, interior access to evidence was relied on by Husserl to clarify the epistemic relationship of intuitions (immediate direct awareness) to objects and contents given through ex… See more

    Nature
    Subjectivity and Interiority as Natural versus phenomenologically apprehended contents

    In a programmatic essay from 1911, outlining his idea of philosophy, Husserl asks:
    How can experience as consciousness give or make co… See more

    Nature
    Transcendental Phenomenology as a response to the “paradox of subjectivity”

    Transcendental philosophy in general has been called a “philosophy of the subject” (cf. Henrich, 2003). Husserl would have agreed with this characterization and his exploration… See more

    Nature
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  1. In the Göttingen years, Husserl drafted the outline of Phenomenology as a universal philosophical science. Its fundamental methodological principle was what Husserl called the phenomenological reduction. It focuses the philosopher’s attention on uninterpreted basic experience and the quest, thereby, for the essences of things.
    www.britannica.com/biography/Edmund-Husserl/P…
    Husserl argued that the study of consciousness must actually be very different from the study of nature. For him, phenomenology does not proceed from the collection of large amounts of data and to a general theory beyond the data itself, as in the scientific method of induction.
     
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