
Phenomenology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Nov 16, 2003 · 1. What is Phenomenology? Phenomenology is commonly understood in either of two ways: as a disciplinary field in philosophy, or as a movement in the history of philosophy. …
Maurice Merleau-Ponty (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Sep 14, 2016 · Phenomenology thereby expresses the emergence of reason and meaning in a contingent world, a creative task comparable to that of the artist or the political activist, which …
Edmund Husserl - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Aug 8, 2025 · Phenomenology in our sense is the science of “origins”, of the “mothers” of all cognition; and it is the maternal ground of all philosophical method: to this ground and to the …
Phenomenology of Religion - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Oct 1, 2008 · This entry examines the relevance of phenomenological considerations for the concept of God (or the sacred otherwise characterised) and the question of what sort of …
Moral Phenomenology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Aug 25, 2021 · Moral phenomenology, understood in this sense, (1) focuses on what is essential to the first-personal, intentional directedness of moral experiences, (2) aims to articulate the …
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - Stanford Encyclopedia of …
Feb 13, 1997 · In a sense Hegel’s phenomenology is a study of phenomena (although this is not a realm he would contrast with that of noumena) and Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit is …
Phenomenological Approaches to Self-Consciousness
Feb 19, 2005 · Phenomenological analyses show these processes to be more than purely mental or cognitive events since they integrally involve embodiment and intersubjective dimensions.
Phenomenological Approaches to Ethics and Information …
Feb 19, 2005 · The phenomenological tradition consists of many different approaches that share certain characteristics (certain family resemblances, one might say) but not all.
Hermeneutics - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Dec 9, 2020 · Thus, phenomenology unfolds as the explication of the structures of being in the world that, initially at least, we experience more or less vaguely, more or less tacitly, in our …
Consciousness and Intentionality - Stanford Encyclopedia of …
Jun 22, 2002 · Thus, in the phenomenological tradition, the discussion of intentionality is thoroughly enmeshed with that of experience or consciousness from the start.