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Phenomenology





Encyclopedia results for Phenomenology

  1. Phenomenology

    Phenomenology may refer to Phenomenology architecture , based on the experience of building materials and their sensory properties Phenomenology archaeology , based upon understanding cultural landscapes from a sensory perspective Phenomenology particle physics , a branch of particle physics that deals with the application of theory to high energy experiments Phenomenology philosophy , a philosophical method and school of philosophy founded by Edmund Husserl 1859 1938 Existential phenomenology , in the work of Husserl s student Martin Heidegger 1889 1976 and his followers Phenomenology of Perception , the magnum opus of French phenomenological philosopher Maurice Merleau Ponty Phenomenology of religion , concerning the experiential aspect of religion in terms consistent with the orientation of the worshippers The Phenomenology of Spirit , a book by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel Phenomenology psychology , used in psychology to refer to subjective experiences or their study Phenomenology science , used in science to describe a body of knowledge that relates empirical observations of phenomena to each other disambig cs Fenomenologie rozcestn k de Ph nomenologie Begriffskl rung es Fenomenolog a fa fr Ph nom nologie mk ru tl Penomenolohiya paglilinaw uk ...   more details



  1. Augustinian phenomenology

    Orphan date December 2010 Augustinian phenomenology is a relatively new field of study within phenomenology philosophy phenomenology . Augustinian phenomenology attempts to reconcile the so called existentialism existential theology of St. Augustine of Hippo with the methodology of Martin Heidegger , Max Scheler , Maurice Merleau Ponty and other phenomenologists. This synthesis of Augustine and phenomenology was perhaps first attempted by the late Anglican theologian, John Macquarrie , in his existential theology. The term Augustinian phenomenology is being used today by a number of philosophers and theologians, most notably by Craig J. N. de Paulo and Joseph O Leary. ref cite book title The Influence of Augustine on Heidegger The Emergence of an Augustinian Phenomenology editor first Craig J. N. editor last de Paulo year 2006 publisher Edwin Mellen Press location Lewiston, New York isbn 978 0 7734 5689 1 ref ref cite web url http josephsoleary.typepad.com my weblog historical theology title Augustine first Joseph S. last O Leary accessdate 14 December 2010 ref While it is different for each philosopher or theologian, it is essentially a Christian existential phenomenology that focuses its study on human anxiety, restlessness, conversion, the call of conscience and the experience of fallenness and death. It can also be said that in each case, it is a methodological reclaim of Augustine and the religious origins of existentialism and phenomenology. References reflist Category Phenomenology Category Religious existentialism ...   more details



  1. Existential phenomenology

    Unreferenced date December 2009 Existential phenomenology is a philosophy philosophical current inspired by Martin Heidegger s 1927 work Sein und Zeit Being and Time and influenced by the existential work of S ren Kierkegaard and the phenomenological work of Edmund Husserl . In contrast with his former mentor Husserl, Heidegger put ontology before epistemology and thought that Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology would have to be based on an observation and analysis of Dasein being there , human being, investigating the fundamental ontology of the Lebenswelt Lifeworld Husserl s term underlying all so called regional ontologies of the special sciences. In contrast with the philosopher Kierkegaard, Heidegger wanted to explore the problem of Dasein existentially existenzial , rather than existentiell y existenziell because Heidegger argued Kierkegaard had already described the latter with penetrating fashion . Citation needed date September 2010 Development of existential phenomenology Besides Heidegger, other existential phenomenologists were Hannah Arendt , Emmanuel Levinas , Gabriel Marcel , Jean Paul Sartre , Maurice Merleau Ponty , and Samuel Todes . Other disciplines Existential phenomenology extends also to other disciplines. For example, Leo Steinberg s essay The Philosophical Brothel describes Picasso s Les Demoiselles d Avignon in a perspective that is existential phenomenological. See also Existentialism Phenomenology philosophy DEFAULTSORT Existential Phenomenology Category Observation Category Existentialist concepts Phenomenology Category Phenomenology Category Concepts in epistemology Philo stub da Eksistentiel f nomenologi ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology of essences

    Unreferenced date September 2009 Context date October 2009 In disagreement with Theodor Lipps s psychologism, some of his students in Munich joined with some of Husserl s from G ttingen to form a new branch called Phenomenology of essences, or Munich phenomenology . Taking new directions from Logische Untersuchungen and supported by Edmund Husserl , they proposed a return to intuition. Category Phenomenology philo stub ...   more details



  1. Munich phenomenology

    Munich Phenomenology , refers to the group of philosophy philosophers , psychology psychologists and Phenomenology philosophy phenomenologists that studied and worked in Munich at the beginning of the twentieth century, when Edmund Husserl published his masterwork, the Logical Investigations and began the phenomenological movement. Their views are grouped under the name Phenomenology of essences . At that time some of the students of Theodor Lipps , who were organised in the Psychologische Verein Psychological Association , notably Adolf Reinach , Johannes Daubert and Alexander Pf nder , were inspired by Husserl s work and took it as a guideline for doing philosophy. Around 1905 many students of Lipps captained by Daubert decided to abandon Munich and to head for G ttingen , to study with Husserl this is also referred to as the G ttingen Circle Munich invasion of G ttingen . Notably, in 1912 the Munich phenomenologists Reinach, Pf nder, Max Scheler and Moritz Geiger founded the famous Jahrbuch f r Philosophie und ph nomenologische Forschung , with Husserl as main editor. After Husserl s publication of the Ideen Ideas in 1913, many phenomenologists took a critical stance towards his new theories. Many members of the Munich group distanced itself from his transcendental phenomenology and preferred the earlier realist phenomenology of the first edition of the Logical Investigations . The Munich Phenomenologists Adolf Reinach Johannes Daubert Alexander Pf nder Moritz Geiger Other members of the Munich Circle August Gallinger Aloys Fisher Theodor Conrad husband of Hedwig Conrad Martius Dietrich von Hildebrand Wilhelm Schapp Sources Herbert Spiegelberg , http books.google.com books?id C8G1HfOJz3AC&dq munich circle aloys Fischer&hl el&source gbs navlinks s The Phenomenological Movement The Hague Boston London 1982 H. Kuhn, E. Av Lallemant, R. Gladiator Eds. , Die M nchener Ph nomenologie ... Research in Phenomenology Category Phenomenology philo stub es Fenomenolog a de M nich it Fenomenologia ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology (archaeology)

    In archaeology , phenomenology applies to the use of sensory experiences to view and interpret an archaeological site or cultural landscape . It first came to widespread attention among archaeologists with the publication of Christopher Tilley s A Phenomenology of Landscape 1994 , in which he suggested it to be a useful technique that can be used to discover more about historical peoples and how they interact with the landscapes in which they live. He argued that, simply by looking at two dimensional depictions of a landscape, such as on a map , archaeologists fail to understand how peoples living in hunter gatherer and agricultural societies actually relate to those areas. He believed, therefore, that investigators should enter the very landscape that they are studying, and use their senses of visual perception sight , Olfaction smell , and hearing to learn more about how historical peoples would have interpreted it. Phenomenology has provoked considerable discussion within the discipline , ref Br ck 2005 45 ref receiving considerable criticism from the archaeological community who deem it to be unscientific and subjective . ref Hamilton & Whitehouse 2006 31 32 ref In contrast to this, it has also been supported by a great number of archaeologists and nowadays is often used in fieldwork alongside other, more traditional methods. It has been used particularly in understanding prehistory prehistoric sites , such as the Neolithic Tavoliere Plain in Italy, ref Hamilton & Whitehouse 2006 ref and the Bronze Age landscape on Bodmin Moor , England. ref Tilley 1996 ref References Footnotes reflist 2 Bibliography Br ck, Joanna. 2005. Experiencing the past? The development of a phenomenological ... Whitehouse, Ruth. 2006. Phenomenology in Practice Towards a methodology for a subjective approach in European Journal of Archaeology Vol. 9, 31 71. Tilley, Christopher. 1994. A Phenomenology of Landscape ... Category Phenomenology ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology of Perception

    The Phenomenology of Perception 1945 is the masterpiece magnum opus of France French Phenomenology philosophy phenomenological philosopher Maurice Merleau Ponty . Image Phenomenology of Perception.JPG thumb 200px Following the work of Edmund Husserl , Merleau Ponty s project is to reveal the phenomenological structure of perception . However, Merleau Ponty s conceptions of phenomenology, and for that matter the dialectic, do not follow Husserl s nor Heidegger s exactly. The central thesis of the book is what Merleau Ponty later called the primacy of perception. We are first perceiving the world, then we do philosophy. This entails a critique of the Cartesian cogito, resulting in a largely different concept of consciousness. The Cartesian dualism of mind and body is called into question as our primary way of existing in the world and is ultimately rejected in favor of a intersubjective conception or dialectical concept of consciousness. What is characteristic of his account of perception is the centrality that the body plays. We perceive the world through our bodies we are embodied subjects, involved in existence. Further, the ability to reflect comes from a pre reflective ground that serves as the foundation for reflecting on actions. In other words, we perceive phenomena first, then reflect on them via this mediation, which is instantaneous and synonymous with our being and perception in, as, and with body, i.e., embodiment. His account of the body helps him undermine what had ... of Phenomenology of Perception . The body stands between this fundamental distinction .... Phenomenology of Perception London Routledge, 2005 eg. pp. 408 ref References references External links Excerpts can be found at Google Books cite book last Merleau Ponty first Maurice title Phenomenology of Perception url http books.google.com books?id tOCZPO6EFQAC&dq phenomenology of perception&source gbs navlinks s Category Phenomenology Category Philosophy books Category Contemporary philosophical ...   more details



  1. Bracketing (phenomenology)

    Merge Epoche date September 2009 Unreferenced date January 2010 Bracketing also called epoch or the phenomenological reduction is a term derived from Edmund Husserl 1859 1938 for the act of suspending judgment about the natural world that precedes Phenomenology philosophy phenomenological analysis. Bracketing involves setting aside the question of the real existence of the contemplated object, as well as all other questions about its physical or objective nature these are left to the natural sciences . For example, the experience of seeing a horse qualifies as an experience, irrespective of whether the horse appears in reality, in a dream, or in a hallucination. By bracketing the horse as object of this experience and, ordinarily, the entire objective world to which the horse belongs if it is real , the Phenomenology philosophy phenomenologist puts aside all questions concerning its objective existence or non existence and considers only the experience that he or she has of it. The concept can be better understood in terms of the Phenomenology philosophy phenomenological activity it is supposed to make possible the unpacking of phenomena, or, in other words, systematically peeling away their symbolic meanings like layers of an onion until only the thing itself as meant and experienced remains. Thus, one s subjective perception of the bracketed phenomenon is examined and analyzed in its purity. Moustakas, C. 1994 . Phenomenological research methods. Sage, Thousand Oaks CA . Creswell, J.W. 2007 . Qualitative inquiry and research design. Sage, Thousand Oaks CA . See also Epoch Category Philosophical methodology Category Phenomenology philosophy stub ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology (architecture)

    Phenomenology is both a philosophy philosophical design current in contemporary architecture and a specific field of academic research, based on the experience of building materials and their sensory properties. In phenomenology, the environment is concretely defined as the place, and the things which occur there take place. The place is not so simple as the locality, but consists of concrete things which have material substance, shape, texture, and color, and together coalesce to form the environment s character, or atmosphere. It is this atmosphere which allows certain spaces, with similar or even identical functions, to embody very different properties, in accord with the unique cultural and environmental conditions of the place which they exist. Phenomenology is conceived as a return to things, maneuvering away from the abstractions of science and its neutral objectivity. Phenomenology absorbs the concept of subjectivity, making the thing and its unique conversations with its place ... as participants in their environment. Beginning in the 1970s, Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology ... Ponty s Phenomenology of Perception English version 1962 . Christian Norberg Schulz was, for many ... of the Oslo School of Architecture. ref His book Genius Loci Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture ... in Architecture Oxford Oxford University Press, 1987 . Although interest in phenomenology has waned ... Pallasmaa as current practitioners of the phenomenology of architecture. Present day architectural phenomenology has widened its scope to include theorists whose modes of thinking are bordering on phenomenology, such as Gilles Deleuze and Henri Bergson , and Paul Virilio urban planner . Notable ... Christian Norberg Schulz, Genius Loci Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture New York Rizzoli, 1980 ... Eds , Dwelling, Place & Environment Towards a Phenomenology of Person and World Martinus Nijhoff 1985 ... Postmodern architecture Category Deconstructivism Category Phenomenology ar ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology (philosophy)

    About phenomenology in philosophy phenomenology as a research methodology Phenomenography phenomenology as an approach in psychology Phenomenology psychology Multiple issues expert subject April 2011 cleanup April 2011 refimprove April 2011 Phenomenology from Ancient Greek Greek phain menon that which ... Phenomenology, in Husserl s conception, is primarily concerned with the systematic reflection on and study ... s conception of phenomenology has been criticized and developed not only by himself but also ... from Rousseau to Foucault , Tempe, AZ Scholargy. ref writes that to understand phenomenology ... and phenomenology. Hicks writes, In effect, the Structuralists were seeking subjective noumenal ... basic form, phenomenology thus attempts to create conditions for the Objectivity philosophy objective ... of conscious experiences such as judgments , perceptions , and emotions . Although phenomenology seeks ... concepts central to phenomenology from the works and lectures of his teachers, the philosophers and psychologists ... An important element of phenomenology that Husserl borrowed from Brentano is intentionality often described ... of it. Though many of the phenomenological methods involve various reductions, phenomenology is, in essence ... into the actual thing as experienced by the person experiencing it. Phenomenology is a direct reaction ... previously employed by Hegel in his Phenomenology of Spirit , it was Husserl s adoption of this term ... perspective, phenomenology is its method, though the specific meaning of the term varies according to how it is conceived by a given philosopher. As envisioned by Husserl, phenomenology is a method .... ref Husserl, Edmund. The Crisis of the European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology. Evanston ... modified Husserl s conception of phenomenology because of what Heidegger perceived as Husserl ... psychology to existence ontology , Heidegger altered the subsequent direction of phenomenology, making ... s conception, phenomenology became increasingly relevant to psychoanalysis . Whereas Husserl gave ...   more details



  1. The Phenomenology of Spirit

    Infobox Book name The Phenomenology of Spirit title orig Ph nomenologie des Geistes translator image ... Hegel s most important philosophical works. It is translated as The Phenomenology of Spirit or The Phenomenology ... Phenomenology . It formed the basis of Hegel s later philosophy and marked a significant development ... of perception perception , consciousness , and political philosophy , The Phenomenology ... death of God theology , and historicist nihilism . ref Pinkard, Terry. Hegel s Phenomenology the Sociality of Reason. Cambridge Cambridge University Press, 1996. 2 ref In The Phenomenology of Spirit ... Heckman others Samuel Cherniak trans. title Genesis and Structure of Hegel s Phenomenology of Spirit ... conscious reflective account ref Pinkard, Terry. Hegel s Phenomenology, 9 ref that a society ..., Hegel s Phenomenology of Spirit ref while Alexandre Koj ve saw it as akin to a Platonic Dialogue ... between .... ref Pinkard, Terry. Hegel s Phenomenology the Sociality of Reason. Cambridge Cambridge University Press, 1996. 2 ref The Preface The Preface to the Phenomenology , all by itself, is considered ... Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology . Phenomenology comes from the Greek language Greek word for to appear , and the phenomenology of mind is thus the study of how consciousness or mind appears ... or structure of mind. Introduction Whereas the Preface was written after Hegel completed the Phenomenology ... Phenomenology of Spirit as being characteristic of the vacuous verbiage he attributed to Hegel ... within itself , and so on. Hegel, Preface to the Phenomenology of the Mind , p. lvii, in the complete ... Whoever looks for the stereotype of the allegedly Hegelian dialectic in Hegel s Phenomenology ... triads, namely, abstract negative concrete especially in his Phenomenology of 1807 , as well as, immediate ... the German word, Geist , can mean either Mind or Spirit . References Reflist English translations of The Phenomenology of Spirit Phenomenology of Spirit , translated by A. V. Miller with analysis of the text ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology (science)

    The term phenomenology in science is used to describe a body of knowledge that relates experiment empirical observations of phenomenon phenomena to each other, in a way that is consistent with fundamental theory , but is not directly derived from theory. For example, we find the following definition in the Concise Dictionary of Physics blockquote Phenomenological Theory . A theory that expresses mathematically the results of observed phenomena without paying detailed attention to their fundamental significance. ref Thewlis, J. Ed. 1973 . Concise Dictionary of Physics. Oxford Pergamon Press, p. 248. ref blockquote The name is derived from phenomenon from Greek o , pl. phenomena and wikt logia logia , translated as study of or research , which is any occurrence that is observable. Phenomenology in physical sciences Phenomenology in social statistics In the science of statistics , the collection of quantifiable data from people involves a phenomenological step. Namely, in order to obtain that data, survey questions must be designed to collect measurable responses that are categorized in a logically sound and practical way, such that the form in which the questions are asked does not bias the results . If this is not done, data distortions due to question wording ... . Princeton Princeton University Press, 1980 ref Phenomenology in qualitative research Generally, in the qualitative context, phenomenology is a method that aims to get to the things themselves ... Conklin, 2007, p. 276 . ref cite journal last Conklin first Thomas title Method or Madness Phenomenology ... experience, phenomenology relies on the interpretive sensitivity, inventive thoughtfulness, scholarly ... 5. ref One dimension of phenomenology, according to Moustakas 1994 , requires the researcher effectively ... phenomenology Phenomenology philosophy Phenomenology psychology References references DEFAULTSORT Phenomenology Science Category Scientific terminology Category Phenomenology Category Philosophy of science ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology of religion

    The phenomenology of religion concerns the Experience experiential aspect of religion , describing religious ... of them can be gained. The Phenomenology philosophy phenomenological approach to the study ... use of the phrase phenomenology of religion occurs in the Lehrbuch der Religionsgeschichte Handbook ... he articulates the task of the science of religion and gives an Outline of the phenomenology of religion ... s phenomenology belongs neither to the history nor the philosophy of religion as Hegel envisioned them . ref 45 ref For Chantepie, it is the task of phenomenology to prepare historical data for philosophical ... groups of religious conceptions . ref 43 ref This sense of phenomenology as a grouping of manifestations is similar to the conception of phenomenology articulated by Robison and the British however, insofar as Chantepie conceives of phenomenology as a preparation for the philosophical elucidation of essences, his phenomenology is not completely opposed to that of Hegel. Kristensen Chantepie s Lehrbuch ... Kristensen . In 1901, Kristensen was appointed the first professorship relating to the phenomenology ... on the phenomenology of religion was edited posthumously, and the English translation was published in 1960 as The Meaning of Religion . ref Kristensen xiii ref James notes that Kristensen s phenomenology ..., phenomenology is affected by the philosophy and history of religion , but for Kristensen ... ref Like Chantepie, Kristensen argues that phenomenology seeks the meaning of religious phenomena. Kristensen clarifies this supposition by defining the meaning that his phenomenology is seeking as the meaning ..., Kristensen argues that phenomenology is not complete in grouping or classifying the phenomena according to their meaning, but in the act of understanding. Phenomenology has as its objects to come ... Kristensen in many respects, while also appropriating the phenomenology of Martin Heidegger and the hermeneutics ... 1963 50, 680 ref It is the task of the phenomenology of religion to interpret the various ways ...   more details



  1. Insight phenomenology

    phenomenology , that is, a set of behavioural properties that accompany problem solving activity for a useful edited review of insight problems and their phenomenology, see Sternberg & Davidson, 1995 ... MA, MIT Press. ref References Reflist See also Wolfgang K hler Category Problem solving Category Phenomenology ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology (psychology)

    Phenomenology is an approach to psychological subject matter that has its roots in the Phenomenology philosophy philosophical work of Edmund Husserl . ref name Giorgi1 Amedeo Giorgi Giorgi, Amedeo . 1970 . Psychology as a Human Science. New York Harper & Row. ref Early phenomenologists such as Husserl , Jean Paul Sartre , and Maurice Merleau Ponty conducted their own psychological investigations in the early 20th century. The work of these phenomenologists later influenced at least two main fields of contemporary psychology the phenomenological psychological approach of the Duquesne School , Amedeo Giorgi , ref name Giorgi1 ref name Giorgi2 Amedeo Giorgi Giorgi, Amedeo . 2009 . The Descriptive Phenomenological Method in Psychology. Duquesne University Press Pittsburgh, PA. ref Jonathan Smith psychologist Jonathan Smith , Frederick Wertz , Steinar Kvale , K hler and others Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis and the experimental approaches associated with Varela , Gallagher , Thompson , and others Embodied cognition embodied mind thesis . Phenomenological psychologists have also figured prominently in the history of the humanistic psychology movement. The experiencing subject can be considered to be the person or self psychology self , for purposes of convenience. In phenomenology philosophy phenomenological philosophy and in particular in the work of Edmund Husserl Husserl , Heidegger , and Merleau Ponty , experience is a considerably more complex concept than it is usually taken to be in everyday use. Instead, experience or being, or existence itself is an in relation to phenomenon, and it is defined by qualities of directedness, embodiment, and worldliness, which are evoked by the term Being in the World . ref name Langdridge, D. 2006 Langdridge, D. 2006 . Phenomenological ... 6. ref Psychotherapy and the phenomenology of emotion Carl Rogers person centered psychotherapy theory .... Category Branches of psychology Category Phenomenology he pt Fenomenologia ...   more details



  1. Ayyavazhi phenomenology

    Ayyavazhi Ayyavazhi phenomenology is the phenomenological variations found in Ayyavazhi society, Worship centers of Ayyavazhi worship centers etc. from their holy text Akilattirattu Ammanai . Though the Ayyavazhi s and its worship centers accept those in Akilam as the guideline to be followed, there is a considerable misunderstandings and inclusions in the socio religious society of Ayyavazhi. Many practices, Ayyavazhi rituals rituals and ideas are phenomenologically adapted from the pre existing traditions which in turn counters the teachings of Akilam . In Worship centers The Pathi s and the Nizhal Thangal s are considered as the primary centers propagating Ayyavazhi teachings , apart from the religious status and relations to each other. Also these centers in common are the grounds where the theoritical ideas of the scriptures being practised, though the Nizhal Thangal s rather than the Pathis have their own limits. Besides those ritual there is a lot of phenomenological inclusions and exclusions in those centers directly and indirectly. In Pathis Swamithope pathi which is considered to be the head quarters of Ayyavazhi seems to the largest phenomenological than any other Pathi s. Akilam clearly states the variations between Mudisoodum perumal and Vaikundar , advocating Perumal as a normal person, but a scholar and a respected one. On the other hand Vaikundar to be the incarnation of Narayana Ekam and as the supreme power God on the other. Secondly the second part of Akilam is dedicated to reveal the monotheism with a mythical storyline. But currently in Swamithope pathi breaking all those two rules, there are separate Panividai s for Paradevathai and Paal Payyan , claiming them as the wife and son of him respectively. Those two claims are based on another claim that Mudisoodum perumal him self is Vaikundar . In Ambala Pathi there is a separate Panividai for Kali , a folk deity in the Vadakku Vasal, even though Kali is being kept inactive in Vadavamugam as imprisonment ...   more details



  1. World Phenomenology Institute

    World Phenomenology Institute is an learned society academic organization founded in 1976 originally named the World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning to promote scholarship in the area of Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology . The organization was founded by Anna Teresa Tymieniecka . External links http www.phenomenology.org WPI website See also Emmanuel Levinas Paul Ricoeur Hans Georg Gadamer Stephan Strasser Category Phenomenology Category Philosophical societies ...   more details



  1. Phenomenology (particle physics)

    Particle physics Phenomenology science phenomenology is the part of theoretical particle physics that deals with the application of theoretical physics theory to high energy particle physics experiments. Within the Standard Model , phenomenology is the calculating of detailed predictions for experiments, usually at high precision e.g., including renormalization radiative corrections . Beyond the Standard Model , phenomenology addresses the experimental consequences of new model building particle physics model s how their new particles could be searched for, how the model parameters could be measured, and how the model could be distinguished from other, competing models. Phenomenology may in some sense be regarded as forming a bridge between the rarefied, highly mathematical world of theoretical physics proper such as quantum field theory quantum field theories and theories of the structure of space time and experimental particle physics. Some examples Monte Carlo method Monte Carlo simulation studies of physics processes at collider s. Next to leading order calculations of particle production ... operators. In this case, the term phenomenology science phenomenological is being used more in its philosophy of science sense. See also Beyond the Standard Model Phenomenology science External links http arxiv.org archive hep ph Papers on phenomenology are available on the hep ph archive of the ArXiv.org e print archive http www.ippp.dur.ac.uk Research List of topics on phenomenology from IPPP, the Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology at University of Durham , UK http arxiv.org abs hep ph 0508097 Collider Phenomenology Basic knowledge and techniques , lectures by Tao Han http pheno.info symposia pheno08 program Pheno 08 Symposium on particle physics phenomenology, including slides from the talks linked from the symposium program. DEFAULTSORT Phenomenology Particle Physics Category Particle physics Category Phenomenology Category Physics too general and redundant es Fenomenolog a ...   more details



  1. Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy

    Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy is a philosophy philosophical learned society society whose purpose is to promote the study of Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology and existentialism . The SPEP was created in 1962 by American philosophers who were interested in Continental philosophy and were dissatisfied with the analytic philosophy analytic approach of the American Philosophical Association . ref name foundation References Reflist refs ref name foundation Cite web url http opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com 2012 02 19 bridging the analytic continental divide title Bridging the Analytic Continental Divide date 2012 02 19 accessdate 2012 02 26 publisher The New York Times last Gutting first Gary ref External links http www.spep.org SPEP website Category Phenomenology Category Existentialist organizations Category Philosophical societies Category Organizations established in 1962 Category American philosophy Category Professional associations based in the United States philo stub ...   more details



  1. Desan

    disambig Desan can refer to Desan bishop , a Christian bishop in Mesopotamia in the 4th century AD. Wilfrid Desan , a philosopher specializing in existentialism and Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology . ...   more details



  1. Cartesian Meditations

    Cartesian Meditations An Introduction to Phenomenology is a book by the philosopher Edmund Husserl , based on two two hour lectures he gave at the Sorbonne , in the Amphith atre Descartes on February 23 and 25, 1929. Over the next two years, he and his assistant Eugen Fink expanded and elaborated on the text of these lectures. These expanded lectures were first published in a 1931 French translation by Gabrielle Peiffer and Emmanuel Levinas . The Cartesian Meditations were never published in German during Husserl s lifetime, a fact which has led some commentators to conclude that Husserl had become dissatisfied with the work in relation to its aim, namely an introduction to transcendental Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology . The text introduces the main features of Husserl s mature transcendental phenomenology, including not exhaustively the transcendental reduction, the epoch , static and genetic phenomenology, eidetic reduction , and eidetic phenomenology. The name, Cartesian Meditations An Introduction to Phenomenology refers to Ren Descartes Ren Descartes Meditations on First Philosophy . Thus Husserl wrote blockquote France s greatest thinker, Ren Descartes, gave transcendental phenomenology new Impulses through his Meditations their study acted quite directly on the transformation of an already developing phenomenology into a new kind of transcendental philosophy. Accordingly one might almost call transcendental phenomenology a neo Cartesianism, even though It Is obliged and precisely by its radical development of Cartesian motifs to reject nearly all the well known doctrinal content of the Cartesian philosophy http www.archive.org details cartesianmeditat017661mbp ... are as follows Presents the Cartesian Way into transcendental phenomenology. Introduces several of Husserl s concepts relating to static phenomenology. Mainly concerned with the topic of reality. Introduces genetic phenomenology and uses the conclusions reached so far to argue for a form of transcendental ...   more details



  1. Scene Generator

    Orphan date February 2009 Unreferenced date June 2007 A scene generator is a computer model that creates a world representation using phenomenology science phenomenology , physics , and behavioral model s, to achieve a useful rendition of the domain of interest. Usually found associated with the synthetic modeling of electro magnetic spectral domains like Optical Visible, IR, UV or Radio Frequency. Category Simulation software software stub ...   more details



  1. Neoma

    Neoma can be Nyoma , a town in Northern India Noema , a technical term in phenomenology to describe a type of thought N h o ma? , a Mandarin Chinese expression in written in Pinyin which means How are you? dab ...   more details



  1. Pre-theoretic belief

    Pre theoretical belief has been an important notion in some areas of linguistics and philosophy , especially Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology and older versions of ordinary language philosophy. It is often assumed, rightly or wrongly, that language depends on mental concepts, and that certain concepts are innate . These innate concepts provide sources of very basic linguistic competency, available to any natural language speaker that enables more complex forms of language use, including philosophical, scientific, or other types of technical language. These basic concepts, in combination, may form basic propositional attitudes about things and events. Often pre theoretical belief refers to these basic propositional attitudes. Also, pre theoretical beliefs may refer to simple intuitions. unreferenced date June 2007 Category Phenomenology Category Belief ling stub philosophy stub ...   more details



  1. Gustav Gustavovich Shpet

    Gustav Gustavovich Shpet Lang ru OldStyleDate April 7 1879 March 26 &ndash November 16, 1937 was a Russia n philosopher , psychologist, art theoretician, and interpreter he knew 17 languages . He was a follower of Edmund Husserl s Phenomenology philosophy phenomenology and introduced Husserlian phenomenology to Russia, modifying the phenomenology which he found in Husserl. As a thinker, he was thoroughly grounded in Russian religious thought of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His philosophy combined Husserl s analysis of the structure of consciousness with Platonism of Orthodoxy , the doctrine of incarnation , and veneration of matter. External links http www.iep.utm.edu s shpet.htm At the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Shpet, Gustav Gustavovich ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1879 PLACE OF BIRTH Kiev DATE OF DEATH November 16, 1937 PLACE OF DEATH tomsk DEFAULTSORT Shpet, Gustav Gustavovich Category Russian philosophers Category 1879 births Category 1937 deaths Category 20th century philosophers Category Phenomenology philosopher stub et Gustav pet fr Gustav Shpet ru , uk ...   more details




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