Phenomenology (pronounced fi-nom-uh-nol-uh-jee)
(1) The study of phenomena.
(2) In philosophy, the system of German philosopher Edmund Husserl (1859–1938) stressing the description of phenomena; the study of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view; developed later as existential phenomenology, in the work of Husserl's student, the one-time Nazi, Martin Heidegger (1889–1976).
(3) In the philosophy of science, the science of phenomena as opposed to the science of being.
(4) In architecture, a school of design based on the experience of building materials and their sensory properties.
(5) In archaeology, a set of theories based upon understanding cultural landscapes from a sensory perspective.
(6) In physics, a branch which deals with the application of theory to experiments.
(7) In empirical psychology, the study of subjective experiences or the experience itself.
(8) In the study of comparative religions, a field of research concerning the experiential aspect of religion in terms consistent with the orientation of the worshippers.
1764: A
compound word phenomen(on) (from the Late Latin phaenomenon (appearance) from the Ancient
Greek φαινόμενον (phainómenon) (thing appearing to view), the
neuter present passive participle of φαίνω
(phaínō) (I show) + logy.
In English the logy suffix originates with loanwords from the Greek,
usually via Latin and French, where the suffix (λογία) is an integral part of the word loaned. Within English, the suffix became productive,
forming names of sciences or departments of study and original compositions
with no link to Greek or Latin forms were common by the late eighteenth century. Phenomenology & phenomenologist are nouns phenomenological is an adjective and phenomenologically is an adverb; the noun plural is phenomenologies.
The road to Hegel
Phenomenology was a created philosophical system that was intended to be free of presupposition, the notion being that objects and events should be observed and described from the position of the observer(s) a process supposedly free from claims about any objective reality. Anything not immediately conscious is to be excluded and rather than deductive or empirical methods, there was a reliance on the information gathered by the senses; all scientific or metaphysical knowledge or belief was discarded. Phenomenology is not an essentially theoretical exercise like idealism which claimed the only thing truly to exist is the mind. Phenomenology instead takes the position that that can be known is subjective reality, thus the pointlessness of an attempt to seek out some objective reality. The focus is on the subjective. That didn’t mean existentialism and phenomenology were the same. Phenomenology was a toolbox of processes with which to view metaphysics and knowledge; existentialism, ultimately, was about generating the normative ethics to make a worthwhile life. Phenomenology’s core method was the investigation and description of phenomena as consciously experienced, devoid from any theoretical framework, and, to whatever extent was possible, undertaken without preconceptions and presuppositions.
The word, though without quite its modern meaning, seems first to have been used in 1764 by Swiss philosopher and mathematician, Johann Heinrich Lambert (1728–1777) in his work Neues Organon, a treatise on logic, the title (New Organon), a nod to The Organon (Ὄργανον in the Ancient Greek meaning “instrument, tool, organ"), the collection of Aristotle's (384-322 BC) six works on logic assembled (circa 40 BC) by a group of disciples known as the Peripatetics. In the reductionist spirit of logic, Lambert applied the word to his particular exploration of the systemic use of knowledge to differentiate truth falsehood but it wasn’t until the publication in 1807 of Phänomenologie des Geistes (Phenomenology of Spirit) by German philosopher GWF Hegel that lineal paths to the twentieth century phenomenological can be traced. Hegel was impenetrable even by the standards of German philosophers so the discursive output of the new phenomenologists of the new century seems hardly surprising. As many students discovered, one can find one's way to Hegel but it's hard to find one's way back.
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