Phenomenology of practice: meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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New York ; London
Routledge
2023
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Ausgabe: | Second edition |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xxii, 498 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9781032131931 9781032131894 |
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adam_text | Contents Preface xiv Acknowledgments xix About the Cover Image:Orpheus and Eurydice by Laura Sava xx SECTION ONE: WAYS OF UNDERSTANDING PHENOMENOLOGY I 1. Doing Phenomenology Phenomenology ofPractice 4 The Phenomenality of a Phenomenon 6 Bringing the Reader to Wonder 9 The Intimate Pleasure of the Secret Soul 13 Cause-and-Effect Insight 15 Meaning Insights 15 Inceptuality or Ingrasping 16 The Active Passivity of Patience 17 The Brain: Consciousness, Experience, Self 18 Streams ofPhenomenology 20 The Foundational Stream 21 The Exegetical Stream 22 The Phenomenal Stream 23 Lived Experience as Starting Point 26 Lived Experience Is Meaningful, yet Not Necessarily Profound The Natural Attitude 27 Back to the Thing Itself—What Is the Concrete? 29 Experience Is Always Self-Experience 31 The Instant of the Now Is Always Late—Too Late 34 To Do Phenomenology on the Things that Matter 36 Epistemology and Ontology ofPractice 37 Being a Phenomenologist 38 Re-interpretive Meaningfulness 40 2. Samples of Phenomenological Texts The Play of the Eyes: What Is It Like to Make Eye Contact? 44 Seeing Where Nothing Can Be Seen 45 Looking Is Taking Possession of the World 48 The Eidos of Eye Contact 52 What Is It Like to Forget Someone s Name? S2 Proper Names 54 Name Calling 55 The Spoken Name as Gesture 56 vii 3 26 42
CONTENTS The Pain of F orgetting 5 8 Spheres of Recognition 59 Trying to Remember 60 Unnaming—Trying to Forget 63 The Eidos of Name-forgetting 64 Gnostic and Pathic Touch: What Is It Like to Touch or Be Touched? 6S The (Dia)Gnostic Touch 67 The Probing Gnostic Touch 68 The Private Pathic Touch 70 The Personal Pathic Touch 71 The Eidos of Touch 74 Looking at the Clock: What Time Is It? 74 A Trompe 1’oeil 75 The Phenomenal Clock 76 Objective Clock Time 77 The Kairos Moment 78 Subjective Clock Time 80 Eidos of Looking for the Time 81 The Experience of Care-as-Worry: What Is the Language of Care? 81 Caring for the Faces of Those Who Are Faceless 84 Care as Primordial Ethic 85 Self-Care 89 Caring for One and Caring for the Many 91 Eidos of Care as Leaping In and Leaping Ahead 93 Writing to See: Why Write? 94 Descending into Darkness 100 Darkness Before the Dawn of (ln)sight 101 Darkness as Method 103 Writing Is Like Falling Forward into the Dark 105 Eidos ofWriting and Reading as Dwelling in Unreality 107 Philosophizing Homesickness: How to Awaken from Boredom ? 107 Phenomenology Awakens 108 Becoming Bored By Being Bored With, and Profound Boredom 109 Eidos of Boredom 110 Things and No-Things 111 3. On the Meaning of Meaning 112 Phenomenological Meaning 112 Strongly and Weakly Incarnated Meaning in Texts IIS Directness and Indirectness ofExpressivity ofMeaning 116 On the Meaning of Thing” and the Call To the Things Themselves” 116 Body-I and Reflective-I 118 The Living Moment of the Now —Presence and Absence 120 Intentional, Retentional, Protentional Consciousness 123 Primal
Impressional Consciousness 124 The Existent 12S viii
CONTENTS 4. Phenomenology Is the Name of a Method Knife Sharpening 129 The Method of Abstemious Reflection 130 From Doing Meta-Meta-Phenomenology to Actual Phenomenologizing 131 Aspects ofPhenomenological Analysis 132 An Example: The Experience of Getting Verklempt 132 Intentional Analysis and Intuition 136 Phenomenology as Method ofInquiry 137 Phenomenology and Psychology 139 Disclosing the Phenomenalities of Human Life 139 Naming Kills What It Calls into Being 141 The I, the Me and the Self 142 Phenomenology Is Not the Psychology of Someone’s Inner Life Phenomenology Avoids Abstraction and Codification 143 The Primacy ofPractice 144 In-Seeing Versus Utility 145 5. The Role of Stories, Anecdotes, and Vignettes The Significance ofAnecdotes in Human Science Inquiry ISO Language and Experience: The Look 153 Retelling Myths for Understanding Life 156 Eros and the Fall for Love 157 Love and the Riddle of the Other 158 Empirical Descriptions Possess Fictional Status 159 Empirical Data Are Stripped of Their Factuality 160 Writing Lived Experience Descriptions (LEDs) 160 The Example Makes the Unknowable Knowable 162 Examples in Phenomenological Texts 163 A Model Is a Definite Example 164 Phenomenology Is a Science ofExamples 164 Lived Meaning 168 On the Structure ofAnecdotal Stories 169 The Power of Punctum 170 Editing Experiential Stories into Anecdotes, Vignettes, Sketches 171 Finessing the Essence of the Anecdote 172 6. Voking Language and Experience Evoking Nearness 175 Revoking Lived-Throughness 176 Invoking Intensification 176 Convoking (Em)Pathy 177 Provoking Epiphany 177
Phenomenological and Psychological Understanding 178 Textual Tone and Aspect Seeing 178 Aspect Seeing 179 Dawning Aspect 180 Aspect Blindness or Meaning Blindness 181 ix 128 142 149 174
CONTENTS Poetic Language: When the Word Becomes Image 182 The Image as a Phenomenological Device 183 The Cognitive and the Pathic 185 SECTION TWO: PROTAGONISTS AND PRACTICES: A TRADITION OF TRADITIONS 7. On the Way to Phenomenology: Precursors Famous Dreams: Rene Descartes 193 Appearance and the Thing Itself: Immanuel Kant 197 Words Kill: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 199 Uncanniness: Friedrich Nietzsche 202 Inner Duration and Laughter: Henri-Louis Bergson 204 Erlebnis^ Expression, Understanding: Wilhelm Dilthey 208 8. Forming Traditions: Foundational Thinkers Transcendental Phenomenology: Edmund Husserl 211 Ontological Phenomenology: Martin Heidegger 218 Personalistic and Value Phenomenology: Max Scheier 224 Empathic and Faith Phenomenology: Edith Stein 228 Personal Practice Phenomenology: Jan Patocka 232 Political Phenomenology: Hannah Arendt 233 9. Phenomenological Orientations: Protagonists Ethical Phenomenology: Emmanuel Levinas 238 Existential Phenomenology: Jean-Paul Sartre 243 Gender Phenomenology: Simone de Beauvoir 249 Embodiment Phenomenology: Maurice Merleau-Ponty 2S1 Hermeneutic Phenomenology: Hans-Georg Gadamer 2S7 Critical Phenomenology: Paul Ricoeur 259 Literary Phenomenology: Maurice Blanchot 263 Oneiric-Poetic Phenomenology: Gaston Bachelard 268 Sociological Phenomenology: Alfred Schutz 270 Postcolonial Phenomenology: Frantz Fanon 272 Material Phenomenology: Michel Henry 276 Deconstruction Phenomenology: Jacques Derrida 279 Feminine Phenomenology: Helene Cixous 283 Technoscience Postphenomenology: Don Ihde 287 Learning Phenomenology: Hubert Dreyfus 289
Sense Phenomenology: Michel Serres 290 Sensual Phenomenology: Alphonso Lingis 292 Fragmentary Phenomenology: Jean-Luc Nancy 298 Religious Phenomenology: Jean-Louis Chretien 302 Philological Phenomenology: Giorgio Agamben 304 Radical Phenomenology: Jean-Luc Marion 306 Technogenetic Phenomenology: Bernard Stiegler 311 Objectivity Phenomenology: Günter Figal 314 Ecstatic-Poetic Phenomenology: Jennifer Anna Gosetti-Ferencei Evential Phenomenology: Claude Romano 320 X 191 193 211 237 316
CONTENTS 10. Phenomenology and the Professions: Practitioners 323 Juris Prudence and Phenomenology 324 Phenomenology of Law: Adolf Bernhard Philipp Reinach 324 Psychopathology and Psychiatry and Phenomenology 327 Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis: Ludwig Binswanger 327 Phenomenology and General Psychopathology: Karl Jaspers 328 Phenomenology and Psychopathology: Eugene Minkowski 330 The Utrecht Tradition ofPhenomenology 331 Phenomenology of Physiology: FrederikJ. Buytendijk 336 Phenomenology of Pedagogy: Martinus J. Langeveld 339 Phenomenology of Psychiatry: Jan Hendrik van den Berg 342 Phenomenology of Pedagogical Atmosphere: Otto F. Bollnow 344 Phenomenology of Pediatrics: Nicolaas Beets 347 Phenomenology of Idolatry: Johannes Linschoten 350 Phenomenology of Ministering: Anthony (Ton) Beekman 351 Phenomenology of Practice Projects 3S1 SECTION THREE: METHODS, RESEARCH, WRITING 355 11. Philosophical Methods: Epoche and Reduction 357 The Basic Method: Phenomenological Reduction 3S7 The Insight-Sensitive Attitude: Epoche Reduction 364 Serendipitous “Method” 365 The Abstemious Epoche-Reduction: Invitations to Openness 366 The Heuristic Epoche-Reduction: Wonder 367 The Hermeneutic Epoche-Reduction: Self-Awareness 368 The Experiential Epoche-Reduction: Concreteness 369 The Methodological Epoche-Reduction: Approach 370 The Reduction-Proper: Meaning-Giving Sources ofMeaning 372 The Eidetic Reduction: Eidos or Whatness 372 The Ontological Reduction: Ways of Being 374 The Ethical Reduction: Alterity 375 The Radical Reduction: Self-Givenness 376 The Originary Reduction: Inception or
Originary Meaning 378 Inversion—From Meaning to Method 382 Lived-Throughness: The Revocative Value of a Text 385 Nearness: The Vivid Evocation of Experience 387 Intensification: Invocative Value of Key-words 389 (Em)Pathic: The Convocative Effect of Text 392 Epiphany: The Provocative Quality of Text 392 12. Human Science Methods: Empirical and Reflective Activities 396 Empirical Methods of Gathering Lived Experience Descriptions 397 Practical Phenomenological Interview Points 399 Two Interview Reminders 401 The Hermeneutic Interview 402 Observing Lived Experiences 402 Borrowing from Fiction 403
CONTENTS Tracing Etymological Sources 403 Searching Idiomatic Phrases 405 Themes and Theme Analysis 406 Approaches to Thematic Reading and Analysis 406 Existentials: Guides for Thematic Reflection 407 Existentiality—Lived World 409 Relationality—Lived Self-Other 409 Corporeality—Lived Body 410 Spatiality—Lived Space 411 Temporality—Lived Time 412 Materiality—Lived Things 413 Technology—Lived Technics 414 What Is a Phenomenological Question ? 416 The Interview Transcript 417 An Example of a Thematic Reading 420 Insight Cultivators (Applied to the Theme of Illness and Health) 424 The Body of Self, Experienced as an Aspect of the World 427 The Experience of the Other’s Body as an Aspect of the World 429 The Body of Self, Experienced as Encumbered 429 The Experience of the Other’s Body as Encumbrance 431 The Body of Self, Experienced as Self-Observed 432 The Experience of the Other’s Body by the Glance My Body 434 The Body of Self, Experienced as Appreciation 435 The Experience of the Other’s Body as Appreciation 437 The Body of Self, Experienced as Call 437 The Experience of the Other’s Body as Call by the Other 439 Insight Cultivators Can Mobilize Phenomenological Insights 440 13. Methodological Issues 444 Conceptual Analysis 444 Truth as Veritas and Aletheia 445 The Reduction, Preduction, and Abduction 447 Validity, Reliability 448 Data Analysis, Coding 451 Evidence and Intuition 452 Intentionality 453 Generalization, Bias, and Prejudice 455 Interpretive Psychological Analysis versus Phenomenological Analysis 457 Bacons Idols 458 14. The Desire to Write 460 Reading the
Writing 462 Textualizing Orality and Oralizing Written Text 463 Research Writing 464 Inner Speech and Inner Writing 466 Phenomenology Is Already Writing 466 Presence and Absence 468 xii
CONTENTS Seeing the World Nude Writing Desire 473 469 Bibliographic References 475 Name Index 490 Subject Index 494 xiii
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adam_txt |
Contents Preface xiv Acknowledgments xix About the Cover Image:Orpheus and Eurydice by Laura Sava xx SECTION ONE: WAYS OF UNDERSTANDING PHENOMENOLOGY I 1. Doing Phenomenology Phenomenology ofPractice 4 The Phenomenality of a Phenomenon 6 Bringing the Reader to Wonder 9 The Intimate Pleasure of the Secret Soul 13 Cause-and-Effect Insight 15 Meaning Insights 15 Inceptuality or Ingrasping 16 The Active Passivity of Patience 17 The Brain: Consciousness, Experience, Self 18 Streams ofPhenomenology 20 The Foundational Stream 21 The Exegetical Stream 22 The Phenomenal Stream 23 Lived Experience as Starting Point 26 Lived Experience Is Meaningful, yet Not Necessarily Profound The Natural Attitude 27 Back to the Thing Itself—What Is the Concrete? 29 Experience Is Always Self-Experience 31 The Instant of the Now Is Always Late—Too Late 34 To Do Phenomenology on the Things that Matter 36 Epistemology and Ontology ofPractice 37 Being a Phenomenologist 38 Re-interpretive Meaningfulness 40 2. Samples of Phenomenological Texts The Play of the Eyes: What Is It Like to Make Eye Contact? 44 Seeing Where Nothing Can Be Seen 45 Looking Is Taking Possession of the World 48 The Eidos of Eye Contact 52 What Is It Like to Forget Someone's Name? S2 Proper Names 54 Name Calling 55 The Spoken Name as Gesture 56 vii 3 26 42
CONTENTS The Pain of F orgetting 5 8 Spheres of Recognition 59 Trying to Remember 60 Unnaming—Trying to Forget 63 The Eidos of Name-forgetting 64 Gnostic and Pathic Touch: What Is It Like to Touch or Be Touched? 6S The (Dia)Gnostic Touch 67 The Probing Gnostic Touch 68 The Private Pathic Touch 70 The Personal Pathic Touch 71 The Eidos of Touch 74 Looking at the Clock: What Time Is It? 74 A Trompe 1’oeil 75 The Phenomenal Clock 76 Objective Clock Time 77 The Kairos Moment 78 Subjective Clock Time 80 Eidos of Looking for the Time 81 The Experience of Care-as-Worry: What Is the Language of Care? 81 Caring for the Faces of Those Who Are Faceless 84 Care as Primordial Ethic 85 Self-Care 89 Caring for One and Caring for the Many 91 Eidos of Care as Leaping In and Leaping Ahead 93 Writing to See: Why Write? 94 Descending into Darkness 100 Darkness Before the Dawn of (ln)sight 101 Darkness as Method 103 Writing Is Like Falling Forward into the Dark 105 Eidos ofWriting and Reading as Dwelling in Unreality 107 Philosophizing Homesickness: How to Awaken from Boredom ? 107 Phenomenology Awakens 108 Becoming Bored By Being Bored With, and Profound Boredom 109 Eidos of Boredom 110 Things and No-Things 111 3. On the Meaning of Meaning 112 Phenomenological Meaning 112 Strongly and Weakly Incarnated Meaning in Texts IIS Directness and Indirectness ofExpressivity ofMeaning 116 On the Meaning of "Thing” and the Call "To the Things Themselves” 116 Body-I and Reflective-I 118 The Living Moment of the "Now"—Presence and Absence 120 Intentional, Retentional, Protentional Consciousness 123 Primal
Impressional Consciousness 124 The Existent 12S viii
CONTENTS 4. Phenomenology Is the Name of a Method Knife Sharpening 129 The Method of Abstemious Reflection 130 From Doing Meta-Meta-Phenomenology to Actual Phenomenologizing 131 Aspects ofPhenomenological Analysis 132 An Example: The Experience of Getting Verklempt 132 Intentional Analysis and Intuition 136 Phenomenology as Method ofInquiry 137 Phenomenology and Psychology 139 Disclosing the Phenomenalities of Human Life 139 Naming Kills What It Calls into Being 141 The I, the Me and the Self 142 Phenomenology Is Not the Psychology of Someone’s Inner Life Phenomenology Avoids Abstraction and Codification 143 The Primacy ofPractice 144 In-Seeing Versus Utility 145 5. The Role of Stories, Anecdotes, and Vignettes The Significance ofAnecdotes in Human Science Inquiry ISO Language and Experience: The Look 153 Retelling Myths for Understanding Life 156 Eros and the Fall for Love 157 Love and the Riddle of the Other 158 Empirical Descriptions Possess Fictional Status 159 Empirical Data Are Stripped of Their Factuality 160 Writing Lived Experience Descriptions (LEDs) 160 The Example Makes the Unknowable Knowable 162 Examples in Phenomenological Texts 163 A Model Is a Definite Example 164 Phenomenology Is a "Science ofExamples" 164 Lived Meaning 168 On the Structure ofAnecdotal Stories 169 The Power of Punctum 170 Editing Experiential Stories into Anecdotes, Vignettes, Sketches 171 Finessing the Essence of the Anecdote 172 6. Voking Language and Experience Evoking Nearness 175 Revoking Lived-Throughness 176 Invoking Intensification 176 Convoking (Em)Pathy 177 Provoking Epiphany 177
Phenomenological and Psychological Understanding 178 Textual Tone and Aspect Seeing 178 Aspect Seeing 179 Dawning Aspect 180 Aspect Blindness or Meaning Blindness 181 ix 128 142 149 174
CONTENTS Poetic Language: When the Word Becomes Image 182 The Image as a Phenomenological Device 183 The Cognitive and the Pathic 185 SECTION TWO: PROTAGONISTS AND PRACTICES: A TRADITION OF TRADITIONS 7. On the Way to Phenomenology: Precursors Famous Dreams: Rene Descartes 193 Appearance and the Thing Itself: Immanuel Kant 197 Words Kill: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 199 Uncanniness: Friedrich Nietzsche 202 Inner Duration and Laughter: Henri-Louis Bergson 204 Erlebnis^ Expression, Understanding: Wilhelm Dilthey 208 8. Forming Traditions: Foundational Thinkers Transcendental Phenomenology: Edmund Husserl 211 Ontological Phenomenology: Martin Heidegger 218 Personalistic and Value Phenomenology: Max Scheier 224 Empathic and Faith Phenomenology: Edith Stein 228 Personal Practice Phenomenology: Jan Patocka 232 Political Phenomenology: Hannah Arendt 233 9. Phenomenological Orientations: Protagonists Ethical Phenomenology: Emmanuel Levinas 238 Existential Phenomenology: Jean-Paul Sartre 243 Gender Phenomenology: Simone de Beauvoir 249 Embodiment Phenomenology: Maurice Merleau-Ponty 2S1 Hermeneutic Phenomenology: Hans-Georg Gadamer 2S7 Critical Phenomenology: Paul Ricoeur 259 Literary Phenomenology: Maurice Blanchot 263 Oneiric-Poetic Phenomenology: Gaston Bachelard 268 Sociological Phenomenology: Alfred Schutz 270 Postcolonial Phenomenology: Frantz Fanon 272 Material Phenomenology: Michel Henry 276 Deconstruction Phenomenology: Jacques Derrida 279 Feminine Phenomenology: Helene Cixous 283 Technoscience Postphenomenology: Don Ihde 287 Learning Phenomenology: Hubert Dreyfus 289
Sense Phenomenology: Michel Serres 290 Sensual Phenomenology: Alphonso Lingis 292 Fragmentary Phenomenology: Jean-Luc Nancy 298 Religious Phenomenology: Jean-Louis Chretien 302 Philological Phenomenology: Giorgio Agamben 304 Radical Phenomenology: Jean-Luc Marion 306 Technogenetic Phenomenology: Bernard Stiegler 311 Objectivity Phenomenology: Günter Figal 314 Ecstatic-Poetic Phenomenology: Jennifer Anna Gosetti-Ferencei Evential Phenomenology: Claude Romano 320 X 191 193 211 237 316
CONTENTS 10. Phenomenology and the Professions: Practitioners 323 Juris Prudence and Phenomenology 324 Phenomenology of Law: Adolf Bernhard Philipp Reinach 324 Psychopathology and Psychiatry and Phenomenology 327 Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis: Ludwig Binswanger 327 Phenomenology and General Psychopathology: Karl Jaspers 328 Phenomenology and Psychopathology: Eugene Minkowski 330 The Utrecht Tradition ofPhenomenology 331 Phenomenology of Physiology: FrederikJ. Buytendijk 336 Phenomenology of Pedagogy: Martinus J. Langeveld 339 Phenomenology of Psychiatry: Jan Hendrik van den Berg 342 Phenomenology of Pedagogical Atmosphere: Otto F. Bollnow 344 Phenomenology of Pediatrics: Nicolaas Beets 347 Phenomenology of Idolatry: Johannes Linschoten 350 Phenomenology of Ministering: Anthony (Ton) Beekman 351 Phenomenology of Practice Projects 3S1 SECTION THREE: METHODS, RESEARCH, WRITING 355 11. Philosophical Methods: Epoche and Reduction 357 The Basic Method: Phenomenological Reduction 3S7 The Insight-Sensitive Attitude: Epoche Reduction 364 Serendipitous “Method” 365 The Abstemious Epoche-Reduction: Invitations to Openness 366 The Heuristic Epoche-Reduction: Wonder 367 The Hermeneutic Epoche-Reduction: Self-Awareness 368 The Experiential Epoche-Reduction: Concreteness 369 The Methodological Epoche-Reduction: Approach 370 The Reduction-Proper: Meaning-Giving Sources ofMeaning 372 The Eidetic Reduction: Eidos or Whatness 372 The Ontological Reduction: Ways of Being 374 The Ethical Reduction: Alterity 375 The Radical Reduction: Self-Givenness 376 The Originary Reduction: Inception or
Originary Meaning 378 Inversion—From Meaning to Method 382 Lived-Throughness: The Revocative Value of a Text 385 Nearness: The Vivid Evocation of Experience 387 Intensification: Invocative Value of Key-words 389 (Em)Pathic: The Convocative Effect of Text 392 Epiphany: The Provocative Quality of Text 392 12. Human Science Methods: Empirical and Reflective Activities 396 Empirical Methods of Gathering Lived Experience Descriptions 397 Practical Phenomenological Interview Points 399 Two Interview Reminders 401 The Hermeneutic Interview 402 Observing Lived Experiences 402 Borrowing from Fiction 403
CONTENTS Tracing Etymological Sources 403 Searching Idiomatic Phrases 405 Themes and Theme Analysis 406 Approaches to Thematic Reading and Analysis 406 Existentials: Guides for Thematic Reflection 407 Existentiality—Lived World 409 Relationality—Lived Self-Other 409 Corporeality—Lived Body 410 Spatiality—Lived Space 411 Temporality—Lived Time 412 Materiality—Lived Things 413 Technology—Lived Technics 414 What Is a Phenomenological Question ? 416 The Interview Transcript 417 An Example of a Thematic Reading 420 Insight Cultivators (Applied to the Theme of Illness and Health) 424 The Body of Self, Experienced as an Aspect of the World 427 The Experience of the Other’s Body as an Aspect of the World 429 The Body of Self, Experienced as Encumbered 429 The Experience of the Other’s Body as Encumbrance 431 The Body of Self, Experienced as Self-Observed 432 The Experience of the Other’s Body by the Glance My Body 434 The Body of Self, Experienced as Appreciation 435 The Experience of the Other’s Body as Appreciation 437 The Body of Self, Experienced as Call 437 The Experience of the Other’s Body as Call by the Other 439 Insight Cultivators Can Mobilize Phenomenological Insights 440 13. Methodological Issues 444 Conceptual Analysis 444 Truth as Veritas and Aletheia 445 The Reduction, Preduction, and Abduction 447 Validity, Reliability 448 Data Analysis, Coding 451 Evidence and Intuition 452 Intentionality 453 Generalization, Bias, and Prejudice 455 Interpretive Psychological Analysis versus Phenomenological Analysis 457 Bacons Idols 458 14. The Desire to Write 460 Reading the
Writing 462 Textualizing Orality and Oralizing Written Text 463 Research Writing 464 Inner Speech and Inner Writing 466 Phenomenology Is Already Writing 466 Presence and Absence 468 xii
CONTENTS Seeing the World Nude Writing Desire 473 469 Bibliographic References 475 Name Index 490 Subject Index 494 xiii |
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author | Van Manen, Max 1942- |
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dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
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dewey-raw | 142.7 |
dewey-search | 142.7 |
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dewey-tens | 140 - Specific philosophical schools |
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id | DE-604.BV048995402 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T22:08:27Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:52:19Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781032131931 9781032131894 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-034258666 |
oclc_num | 1392147740 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-20 DE-29 DE-12 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-20 DE-29 DE-12 DE-188 |
physical | xxii, 498 Seiten |
publishDate | 2023 |
publishDateSearch | 2023 |
publishDateSort | 2023 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Van Manen, Max 1942- Verfasser (DE-588)102843331X aut Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing Max van Manen Second edition New York ; London Routledge 2023 xxii, 498 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Sozialwissenschaften (DE-588)4055916-6 gnd rswk-swf Phänomenologie (DE-588)4045660-2 gnd rswk-swf Forschung (DE-588)4017894-8 gnd rswk-swf Humanwissenschaften (DE-588)4481515-3 gnd rswk-swf Phänomenologische Soziologie (DE-588)4366083-6 gnd rswk-swf Hermeneutik (DE-588)4128972-9 gnd rswk-swf Phenomenology / Research / Methodology Hermeneutics / Research / Methodology Social sciences / Research / Methodology Phänomenologie (DE-588)4045660-2 s Humanwissenschaften (DE-588)4481515-3 s Forschung (DE-588)4017894-8 s DE-604 Phänomenologische Soziologie (DE-588)4366083-6 s Hermeneutik (DE-588)4128972-9 s Sozialwissenschaften (DE-588)4055916-6 s Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-003-22807-3 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034258666&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Van Manen, Max 1942- Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing Sozialwissenschaften (DE-588)4055916-6 gnd Phänomenologie (DE-588)4045660-2 gnd Forschung (DE-588)4017894-8 gnd Humanwissenschaften (DE-588)4481515-3 gnd Phänomenologische Soziologie (DE-588)4366083-6 gnd Hermeneutik (DE-588)4128972-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4055916-6 (DE-588)4045660-2 (DE-588)4017894-8 (DE-588)4481515-3 (DE-588)4366083-6 (DE-588)4128972-9 |
title | Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing |
title_auth | Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing |
title_exact_search | Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing |
title_exact_search_txtP | Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing |
title_full | Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing Max van Manen |
title_fullStr | Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing Max van Manen |
title_full_unstemmed | Phenomenology of practice meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing Max van Manen |
title_short | Phenomenology of practice |
title_sort | phenomenology of practice meaning giving methods in phenomenological research and writing |
title_sub | meaning-giving methods in phenomenological research and writing |
topic | Sozialwissenschaften (DE-588)4055916-6 gnd Phänomenologie (DE-588)4045660-2 gnd Forschung (DE-588)4017894-8 gnd Humanwissenschaften (DE-588)4481515-3 gnd Phänomenologische Soziologie (DE-588)4366083-6 gnd Hermeneutik (DE-588)4128972-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Sozialwissenschaften Phänomenologie Forschung Humanwissenschaften Phänomenologische Soziologie Hermeneutik |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034258666&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT vanmanenmax phenomenologyofpracticemeaninggivingmethodsinphenomenologicalresearchandwriting |