Difference between revisions of "Phenomenological methodology"

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Phenomenologists frequently claim that their philosophical approach does not establish a philosophical system or a set of premises, but introduces and refines a certain philosophical method. Thus, while being a philosophical neighbor to psychology of perception and to German Gestaltpsychologie (which boomed shortly before Merleau-Pontys writings), it does not want to replace psychology, but mirror and amend it in the field of philosophy. <ref>Bermes, C. (2017). Maurice Merleau-Ponty zur Einführung. Junius Verlag, p. 25.</ref>  
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Phenomenologists frequently claim that their philosophical approach does not establish a philosophical system or a set of premises, but introduces and refines a certain philosophical method. Thus, while being a philosophical neighbor to psychology of perception and to German Gestaltpsychologie (which boomed shortly before Merleau-Pontys writings), it does not want to replace psychology, but mirror and amend it in the field of philosophy.<ref>Bermes, C. (2017). Maurice Merleau-Ponty zur Einführung. Junius Verlag, p. 25.</ref>
 
[to be continued]
 
[to be continued]
 
=== Phenomenological Reduction ===
 
=== Phenomenological Reduction ===
 
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Revision as of 00:04, 12 May 2017

Phenomenologists frequently claim that their philosophical approach does not establish a philosophical system or a set of premises, but introduces and refines a certain philosophical method. Thus, while being a philosophical neighbor to psychology of perception and to German Gestaltpsychologie (which boomed shortly before Merleau-Pontys writings), it does not want to replace psychology, but mirror and amend it in the field of philosophy.<ref>Bermes, C. (2017). Maurice Merleau-Ponty zur Einführung. Junius Verlag, p. 25.</ref> [to be continued]

Phenomenological Reduction

[nothing here]