by admin | Aug 21, 2024 | Scholars
Scheler’s work is proof that phenomenology does not need to be practiced as a rigorous method in the sense of Husserl. Yet, he carefully and brilliantly explores phenomenological distinctions by means of the “method” of the phenomenological attitude and reflections...
by admin | Aug 21, 2024 | Scholars
Schleiermacher is born on November 21, 1768, in Breslau, Lower Silesia. His father is a Prussian army chaplain. Friedrich Schleiermacher attends Moravian boarding schools and later becomes a student at the University of Halle from 1787-1790, until he passes...
by admin | Aug 21, 2024 | Scholars
The phenomenological sociology and social science of Alfred Schutz is significant for its contribution to a phenomenology of social action, the lifeworld, the notion of multiple realities, the idea of taken-for-grantedness of everyday life practices, and so forth. His...
by Michael van Manen | Aug 21, 2024 | Scholars
When the phenomenological historian Herbert Spiegelberg sets out “to give a minimum operational grasp of what it means to do phenomenology” (p. 14), he starts from the commonly accepted Husserlian phrase “To the Things” (Zu den Sachen) which indicates that doing...
by admin | Aug 21, 2024 | Scholars
An interesting case of validity critique is contained in the scornful criticism by Stephen Strasser who once referred to Jean-Paul Sartre’s famous account of the objectifying look as “phenomenological impressionism” (1974, pp. 295–302). In his account of “the look”...
by admin | Aug 21, 2024 | Scholars
Van den Berg argues that it was a significant event in human history, around the year 1300, when the ordinary closed body was first cut open and by Mundinus and soon by others. From this historical moment onward, it is possible to see the hand with two kinds of...