Sentences with phrase «phenomenological concern»

On the part of the minister there is an empathetic or phenomenological concern for the attitudes of all the other people (and their conditions such as broken arms) to all serious things, including Christian faith but not confined to it, regardless of the existing content of those views and conditions.
From there, they unfold a larger picture of phenomenological concerns.

Not exact matches

Keen has answered just such a question by suggesting that his concern is a phenomenological one, centering on those places where the holy is most manifest.
The point that brings Whitehead directly to the concerns of the phenomenological method is his affirmation of the «subjectivist principle»: «The philosophy of organism entirely accepts the subjectivist bias of modern philosophy.
He is concerned with the theologico - philosophical, epistemological, psychological, phenomenological and historical analysis of the nature and meaning of religion and with the forms of expression of religious experience and the dynamics of religious life.
I suspect that there is an empirical or phenomenological difference between us concerning the actual character of experience associated with the development and use of technology.
Concerned with notions of the romantic sublime, phenomenological experience, and secular spiritualism, the work continues Russell's unique investigation into the possibilities of cinema as a site for transcendence.
Phantom LIM concerns itself with the unreachable and the limits of perception, considering on one hand the phenomenological boundaries of physical perception and the mathematical expression of liminal boundaries on the other.
l Los Diez moved abstraction from purely visual, formal concerns toward conceptual and phenomenological ends, in line with other contemporaneous international art movements, to engage both the viewer and the broader collective conscience of Cuba.
Concerned with the displacement and trivialization of authentic experience by technologies constructed to simulate phenomenological and physiological experiences, Buchanan's work questions our perception of wonderment and enchantment arising from the witnessing of natural phenomenon.
Presenting materials and documentation surrounding his remarkable final project Rosendale, A Public Work, the exhibition also draws upon his earlier work concerning his observations of the natural and social world and the construction of phenomenological objects.
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