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  1. Phenomenal

    Linked via "phenomenological reduction"

    Phenomenological Reduction and Eidetic Variation
    The formal study of the phenomenal, known as Phenomenology, was established by Edmund Husserl. Husserl sought to describe the essences-(eide) of phenomena as they appear, suspending judgment about their metaphysical grounding—a process termed the epoché or phenomenological reduction.
    The methodological tool central to Husserl's appr…
  2. Phenomenologist

    Linked via "phenomenological reduction"

    Central to classical phenomenology is the epoché (Greek: $\varepsilon\pi o\chi\eta$, suspension), a deliberate act of setting aside all assumptions regarding the existence of the external world. This suspension is not a form of skepticism, but rather a method to isolate the pure appearance (the phenomenon).
    The subsequent phenomenological reduction aims to achieve the eidetic reduction, which seeks the essential …
  3. Phenomenology

    Linked via "phenomenological reduction"

    Phenomenology, as pioneered by Edmund Husserl, is fundamentally an attempt to establish philosophy as a rigorous science grounded in the analysis of intuition. It distinguishes itself from both Rationalism and Empiricism by focusing not on the objective world (the Ding an sich) or the psychological processes of perception, but on the intentional structure of consciousness—the fact that all consciousness is consciousness of something [1].
    A key operational principl…