Sentences with phrase «in phenomenology»

Dr. Conelea's research and clinical interests are in the phenomenology, etiology, and treatment of tic and obsessive - compulsive spectrum disorders.
With an interest in the phenomenology of experience, Diana is on the cutting edge of transformational theory and practice.
He is interested in the phenomenology, etiology, and treatment of anxiety and obsessive - compulsive spectrum disorders, including OCD, hair - pulling disorder (trichotillomania), and tic disorders.
Though Shephard Fairey might be best known for his Hope poster that defined Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign, the artist is best known on the street for his OBEY works, which challenge the status quo and illustrate Fairey's interest in phenomenology and subversion... in other words, «damn the man.»
Now along comes a show that aims to prove it: «Roy Lichtenstein: Inside / Outside» marshals 120 works to demonstrate, in the words of MCA director Bonnie Clearwater, that «Lichtenstein studied how the human mind comprehends space in two and three dimensions... [his] methods in fact... reflect an interest in phenomenology
Taro Suzuki's untitled Op piece (2016) continues the line of abstraction's experiments in the phenomenology of vision.
Rather than a perceptual fluke or an experiment in phenomenology, however, this is, I think, a part of the painting.»
In works by James Brooks, we feel nature in the phenomenology of his flowing, ever flooding - out plains of color; and even the non-gestural Rothko is still dealing with the dichotomy (and resultant ambiguity) between what the eye sees and derives from landscape (the horizon) and what the heart feels before a field of color.
But just as contended by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel in his Phenomenology of Spirit that the only lesson men learn from history is that they learn nothing, Nigeria's political parties appear to have closed their eyes and ears to the lessons of history.»
«In just the first few days of that first session, I quickly realized that what I had anticipated as just a sixth grade physics prep course was actually an experiential course in phenomenology that would affect not only how I would eventually teach physics, but also how I would teach everything.
The structural dualism introduced by Van der Leeuw in the phenomenology of the Supreme Being is particularly evident in the contrast between the otiositas which is attributed to many Supreme Beings of the ethnological world, and the intense activity of Yahweh.
An examination of the results of Professor Duméry's critique on religion permits us to appreciate its value, but we must say that far from being an achievement in the phenomenology of religion such as Husserl, Van der Leeuw, Eliade, or Wach have conceived it, it runs the risk of compromising the results of phenomenology.
So, in phenomenology, no subject would grasp an element in its world in a way exactly like the way in which another subject would grasp the same data.
It does not obliterate, however, other interests in phenomenology and linguistic analysis.
(Fundamental Anthropology [Washington, D.C.: Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology & University Press of America, 1982], pp. 126, 125.)
Moreover, as Hegel makes clear in the Phenomenology of Spirit, even within the human organism it undergoes many stages of growth before it reaches full self - consciousness as a participant in the reality of Absolute Spirit.
13 In the section on force and understanding in his Phenomenology of Mind Hegel gives an unsurpassed description of the expansion of real reflexivity from a bounded, thing - like relation to the whole of the world.
This essay will appear in slightly revised version in The Phenomenology of Prayer, edited by Bruce Ellis Benson and Norman Wirzba.
5 Bruce Wilshire, William James and Phenomenology (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1968); Gurwitsch, Studies in Phenomenology and Psychology (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1966); A. Schuetz, «William James» Concept of the Stream of Thought Phenomenologically Interpreted,» Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 1 (1941), 442 - 52.
In Phenomenology and Humanism William A. Luijpen states: To be subject means to be both an affirmation and a nihilation of the world in which we are involved.
There is one passage in Phenomenology of Perception which speaks of primordial intentionality and its scope.
In phenomenology, symbolic logic, and the analysis of the meaning of language, attempts are still being made to reach determinate conclusions not subject to further revision.
The recurring image of the caput mortuum, the death's head, that, for example, appears with such sarcasm and irony in the treatment of phrenology in the Phenomenology of Spirit, is Hegel's metaphor for the lifeless rigidity of subject - predicate thinking.
Merleau - Ponty's use of the expression «gestural ensemble» in The Phenomenology of Perception similarly describes this habitual availability of language.
Rather than explicitly invoking consciousness to effect the reconciliation of opposites as he does in the Phenomenology, Hegel here interprets Aufhebung (sublation) as a purely logical movement, in which the «contradiction,» or opposed or «dirempted» elements, are as «matter» to the «form» of the resolution on a higher level.
He is interested in the phenomenology of oppression and the criteria is necessary for its elimination.

Not exact matches

He is reading St. Augustine in the light of his own phenomenology when he speaks of God entering into the human heart unbidden and awakening its deepest aspirations long before we have had any thought about God.
This coheres with a subjectivized reading of the phenomenology of Dasein which is far from being sufficiently «reformed,» that is, in relation to the real target of Heidegger's dismantling of the tradition.
2 The most provocative phenomenological attack on the «flowing» metaphor can be found in Maurice Merleau - Ponty, The Phenomenology of Perception (translated by Collin Smith, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1962), pp. 410 - 14 and ff.
For in either case the same temporal - horizonal choice has been made, on the basis of the same dire presuppositions about the phenomenology of Dasein.
The doctrine of psyche in Neoplatonism bears some striking resemblances to the phenomenology of Dasein.
His understanding of the possibility of the achievement of this ideal and the fact that it often was achieved in a «crisis experience» seems to be elaborated out of an analysis based on the collected experiences of a number of his followers - a sort of «phenomenology of Christian experience.»
For while Keen begins consistently with the phenomenon of play (wonder), he moves only cautiously and in conclusion to the overtly theological («theology is phenomenology»).
Hegel, in those difficult, often cryptic, but nevertheless profoundly rewarding pages in the final sections of The Phenomenology of Spirit, where he discusses Christianity as the «absolute religion,» gives witness to the advent of an absolute form of Christianity which both negates all previous religion and promises a reconciliation of all those antinomies which have plagued human consciousness throughout its history.
The Theory of Intuition in Husserl's Phenomenology, trans.
(I shall return to this point in section V.) One will recall that for Heidegger phenomenology is ontology, and many phenomenologists have followed Heidegger in this significant divergence from Husserl.
In a highly significant article, Montgomery Furth argues that Leibniz's monad is also the result of the Cartesian phenomenology of the «First Meditation.
In summing up, we have seen that there are substantial parallels between Whitehead and existential phenomenology.
Merleau - Ponty's use of primordial intentionality is embodied in this quotation from Phenomenology of Perception:
Cairns was a confirmed adherent of Husserlian phenomenology when he return to Harvard in the fall of 1926.
For him phenomenology remains too psychological in its inability to conceive of all entities as intentional subjects.
In this respect phenomenology is certainly a type of process philosophy.
Other essays in the collection compare and contrast Hartshorne's theism with Latin American liberation theology (Peter C. Phan), with phenomenology and Buddhism (Hiroshi Endo), and with European philosophy (André Cloots and Jan Van der Veken).
The result was a phenomenology of the religious experience that began with the objective data of religion (in the Rav's case halakah), which the believer must appropriate for himself.
This correlation of the respective «subjects» of phenomenology and process philosophy must be kept in mind throughout the remainder of this analysis.
Therefore, in both process thought and phenomenology descriptive analysis leads to speculative metaphysics.
79 - 102; Thomas Hanna, «The Living Body: Nexus of Process Philosophy and Existential Phenomenology,» Soundings 52 (Fall, 1969), 323 - 33; Calvin Schrag, «Whitehead and Heidegger: Process Philosophy and Existential Philosophy,» Dialectica 13 (1959), 42 - 56; also in Philosophy Today 4 (1960), 26 - 35; David R. Mason, «Time in Whitehead and Heidegger: Some Comparisons,» PS 5:83 - 105.
In his «analytic phenomenology» Stephen A. Erickson has ably established a solid relationship between Heidegger's version of intentionality and the later Wittgenstein's (LB 109 - 11).
and author of An Existential Phenomenology of Law Maurice Merleau - Ponty (Kluwer 1987), plus a number of articles in Continental Thought.
Phenomenology, at least in its first practitioners and its early stages, was conceived as a conscious rejection of subjectivism and an attempt to recover, without abandoning inwardness, the experienced reality of external things and of the self as well.
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