Copilot
Your everyday AI companion
About 128,000 results
  1. Existential phenomenology encompasses a wide range of thinkers who take up the view that philosophy must begin from experience like phenomenology, but argues for the temporality of personal existence as the framework for analysis of the human condition.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Existential_phenomenology
    Existential-phenomenology seeks to develop an in-depth, embodied understanding of human existence. It challenges approaches in psychology and psychiatry that view human beings in a reductionistic manner.
    www.seattleu.edu/artsci/map/prospective-students/…
    We employ the term “existential phenomenology” to refer to a broad philosophical approach shared by various philosophers, including Jean-Paul Sartre, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Martin Heidegger. It is more specific than “existentialism,” as one could be an existentialist without being a phenomenologist.
    www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-compa…

    It is one of the regional ontologies, or studies of the kinds of fundamental being, that is concerned with what it means to experience a certain thing (e.g., to experience fear) and with what the a priori, or essential and universally applicable, structures of such an experience are.

    www.britannica.com/topic/phenomenological-psych…
  2. People also ask
    Existential phenomenology encompasses a wide range of thinkers who take up the view that philosophy must begin from experience like phenomenology, but argues for the temporality of personal existence as the framework for analysis of the human condition.
    Most existentialist phenomenologists were concerned with how people are constituted by their experiences and yet how they are also free in some respect to modify both themselves and the greater world in which they live.
    It is also arguable that existential phenomenology appears in Japan with Miki Kiyoshi’s Pasukaru niokeru Ningen no Kenkyu (A Study of Man in Pascal) (1926) and Kuki Shuzou’s Iki no Kouzou (The Structure of Iki) (1930). Chiefly, however, the existential tendency developed in France during the 1930s.
    Existentialism has had a profound impact on how philosophers conceptualize and understand the human condition, with rich accounts of affectivity and embodiment, facticity (or worldliness), and the ways in which we are constituted intersubjectively.
  3. See more
    See more
    See all on Wikipedia
    See more

    Existential phenomenology - Wikipedia

    Existential phenomenology encompasses a wide range of thinkers who take up the view that philosophy must begin from experience like phenomenology, but argues for the temporality of personal existence as the framework for analysis of the human condition. See more

    In Being and Time, Martin Heidegger reframes Edmund Husserl's phenomenological project into what he terms See more

    Existential phenomenology also extends to other disciplines. For example, Leo Steinberg's essay "The Philosophical Brothel" describes Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon See more

    Wikipedia text under CC-BY-SA license
    Feedback
  4. Phenomenology (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

  5. Existentialism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

  6. Maurice Merleau-Ponty - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

  7. Phenomenological movement - Routledge Encyclopedia of …

  8. Sartre, Jean Paul: Existentialism - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

  9. Capturing Lived Experience: Methodological Considerations for ...

  10. Phenomenology | Definition, Characteristics, …

    WEBMay 2, 2024 · Finally, in existential phenomenology, the meanings of certain phenomena (such as anxiety) are explored by a special interpretive (“hermeneutic”) phenomenology, the methodology of which needs …

  11. Phenomenology (philosophy) - Wikipedia