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Phenomenology and Husserl 
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Post structuralist Approaches to Language 
and Culture 
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Nadine Al-Qafee 
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Introduction 
Phenomenology is the philosophical study of the structures of experience and 
consciousness. As a philosophical movement it was founded in the early years of 
the 20th century by Edmund Husserl. 
What is phenomenology? 
Husserl argued that phenomenology did not deny the existence of the real world, 
but sought instead to clarify the sense of this world (which everyone accepts) as 
actually existing. 
Husserl lays out what we already have going on: Typical acts of consciousness - he 
assigns them as two spheres: they are worldly; they are “psychological”. 
The Two Spheres: 
The two spheres are connected only by the mind’s ability to pass between them as 
easily as it can meander around and through them; the mind also can combine, 
linger within, focus and disperse. I can just imagine these spheres just like an 
example of a (Cow) for a normal person cow is only a cow but for Indian it’s a 
holy cow and if I dreamed of a cow will not make a different but if an Indian 
dreamed of that …. Then things will go another direction of being holy person or a 
good thing coming up to their life and so on .
Husserl believes there is a third unity - that of the consciousness, where 
experiences and intuition act out their part. Husserl’s task is to get from these 
spheres and into this other field that is quite unlike them: he calls this the sphere of 
absolute consciousness and it encompasses the Living unity of Consciousness as it 
flows along in a stream of experiences. 
Each of these three unities has and exhibits its own distinctive kind of identity and 
persistence. 
For example, you can tell when the object occupying your consciousness is a 
physical thing because it does not present itself all at once. Instead, you are invited 
into a perspective, to move around from one side to the other, to perceive some 
more about the thing. All the while, the thing keeps it’s unity to itself, as the 
reference point of all the angles it gives you. 
However, the essences give themselves to you all at once. You do not have to 
consider the north face of a building and then a south face to get the whole picture. 
But the third unity, consciousness, while it can present itself as essence or fact, it is 
always contextualized as a foreground. 
To get to the sphere of absolute consciousness, you have to let the worldly go away 
and then inhabit what’s left. To inhabit what’s left, you must look to the 
Phenomenological method.
What is the phenomenological method? 
Husserl tells us why we need the method of Phenomenological Reduction: 
A general example of the concept of reduction can be taken from a piece of wax: 
The wax appears to be flat, opaque, hard and extended to certain dimensions in 
space. 
Most of these quantities can be negated as necessary to the piece of wax continuing 
to be a piece of wax. The smell, taste, texture, if heated will continue to be the 
same piece of wax, however the small, taste and texture will obviously have 
changed. The only things that remain (mass, chemical makeup) are the things that 
are required for its existence. Husserl uses eidetic Phenomenological Reduction: he 
calls it bracketing away /suspending / disconnecting. It seeks to momentarily 
reduce, effectively erase the world of speculation by returning the subject to their 
primordial experience of the matter, whether the object of inquiry is a feeling, an 
idea or a perception. 
Bracketing (epoche) is the act of suspending judgment about the natural world. The 
systematic removal (SLIDE: The pealing onion) one by one, of the inessential 
aspects,the symbolic meanings, context, to get to the core: leaving only the essence 
of what constitutes the thing. 
Thus, one’s subjective perception is the truest form of experience one can have in 
perceiving it. This allows one to examine phenomena as they are originally given 
to consciousness. 
It involves setting aside the question of real existence, as well as questions about 
its physical nature; these questions are left to the natural sciences. For example, the 
experience of seeing a tree qualifies as an experience, whether the tree appears in 
reality, in a dream or in a hallucination. (Reminds us of my thopoeic thought). We 
are to suspend belief in what we ordinarily take for granted. 
Husserl tells us we need to reduce the natural world to its pure consciousness, so 
that what we are left with is a pure framework with which to consider the mindset 
and methodology of phenomenology.
The procedure of bracketing is essential: the phenomenological reduction helps us 
to free ourselves from prejudices and secure the purity of our detachment as 
observers, so that we can encounter “things as they are in themselves” 
independently of any presuppositions. The goal of phenomenology for Husserl is 
then a descriptive, detached. Phenomenological reduction is also a method of 
bracketing empirical intuitions away from philosophical inquiry, by refraining 
from making judgments upon them. Husserl uses the term epoche (Greek, for "a 
cessation") to refer to this suspension of judgment regarding the true nature of 
reality. Bracketed judgment is an epoche or suspension of inquiry, which places in 
brackets whatever facts belong to essential being. 
Bracketing is also a neutralization of belief. "Doxic positing" (the positing of 
belief) may be actual or potential. Doxic positing may occur in every kind of 
consciousness, because every consciousness may actually or potentially posit 
something about being. 
analysis of consciousness in which objects, as its correlates, are constituted. 
And So, while phenomenology is primarily concerned with the systematic 
reflection and analysis of the structures of consciousness, it is to take place from a 
highly modified “first person” viewpoint: studying phenomena not as they appear 
to “my” consciousness, but to any consciousness whatsoever. Husserl believed that 
phenomenology could provide a firm basis for all human knowledge, including 
scientific knowledge, and could establish philosophy as a rigorous science. 
Now let’s talk about ideas of Phenomenology: 
The Ideas are divided into four sections: 
(1) The Nature and Knowledge of Essential Being, 
(2) The Fundamental Phenomenological Outlook, 
(3) Procedure of Pure Phenomenology In Respect of Methods and Problems," 
(4) Reason and Reality." The first section describes how the realm of essence 
differs from the realm of facts. 
The second section describes how phenomenological reduction may be used as a 
method of philosophical inquiry. The third section describes
how noesis and noema may be defined as phases of intentionality. The fourth 
section describes the relation between consciousness and noematic meaning. 
Husserl distinguishes between phenomenology as a science of pure consciousness 
and psychology as a science of empirical facts. For Husserl, the realm of pure 
consciousness is distinct from the realm of real experience. Husserl explains that 
phenomenology is a theory of pure phenomena, and that it is not a theory of actual 
experiences (or of actual facts or realities). 
According to Husserl, essential being must be distinguished from actual existence, 
just as the pure ego must be distinguished from the psychological ego. Essences 
are non-real, while facts are real. The realm of transcendentally reduced 
phenomena is non-real, while the realm of actual experience is real. Thus, 
phenomenological reduction leads from knowledge of the essentially real to 
knowledge of the essentially non-real. 
Phenomenological reduction is a process of defining the pure essence of a 
psychological phenomenon. It is a process whereby empirical subjectivity is 
suspended, so that pure consciousness may be defined in its essential and absolute 
being. This is accomplished by a method of "bracketing" empirical data away from 
consideration. "Bracketing" empirical data away from further investigation leaves 
pure consciousness, pure phenomena, and the pure ego as the residue of 
phenomenological reduction. 
Facts or realities are the objective data of empirical intution, says Husserl, but 
essences are the objective data of essential intuition. Empirical intuition may lead 
to essential intuition (or essential insight), which may be adequate or inadequate in 
terms of its clearness and distinctness. Empirical or non-empirical objects may 
have varying degrees of intuitability, and empirical or non-empirical intuitions may 
vary in their clearness and distinctness. Non-empirical intuitions may apprehend 
objects that are produced by fantasy or imagination. 
Husserl describes consciousness as intentional insofar as it refers to, or is directed 
at, an object. Intentionality is a property of directedness toward an object. 
Consciousness may have intentional and non-intentional phases, but intentionality 
is the property that gives consciousness its objective meaning. 
The cogito ("I think") is the principle of the pure ego. The pure ego performs acts 
of consciousness (cogitations) that may be immanently or transcendently directed. 
Immanently directed acts of consciousness refer to objects that are within the same 
ego or that belong to the same stream of consciousness. Transcendently directed
acts of consciousness refer to objects that are outside the ego or that belong to a 
different stream of consciousness. The objects of consciousness (cogitata) are the 
embodied or unembodied things that are perceived and consciously experienced. 
The difference between immanent and transcendent perception reflects the 
difference between being as experience and being as thing.1 Things as they exist in 
themselves cannot be perceived immanently, and they can only be perceived 
transcendently. The difference between immanent and transcendent perception also 
reflects the difference in the way in which things are given and presented to 
consciousness. Givenness may be adequate or inadequate in terms of its clearness 
and distinctness, and in terms of its intuitability. 
Immanently perceived objects have an absolute being insofar as their existence is 
logically necessary. The existence of transcendently perceived objects is not 
logically necessary, insofar as their existence is not proved by the being of 
conciousness itself. Consciousness itself is absolute being, but the spatial-temporal 
world is merely phenomenal being. 
Husserl emphasizes that phenomenology is concerned with the essence of 
whatever is immanent in consciousness, and that it is concerned with describing 
immanent essences. To confuse the essences of things with the mental 
representations of those essences is to confuse the aims of phenomenology and 
psychology. Phenomenology is a descriptive analysis of being as consciousness, 
while psychology is a descriptive analysis of being as reality. The difference 
between being as consciousness and being as reality is also the difference between 
transcendental and transcendent being. 
Every actual cogito has an intentional object (and is a mode of 
thinking about something). The cogito itself may become a cogitatum if the 
principle that "I think" becomes an object of consciousness. Thus, in the cogito, the 
act of thinking may become an intentional object. However, in contrast to the 
Cartesian principle that "I think, therefore I am" (cogito ergo sum), the 
phenomenologically reduced cogito is a suspension of judgment about whether "I 
am" or whether "I exist." The phenomenologically reduced cogito is a suspension 
of judgment about the question of whether thinking implies existence. Thus, 
phenomenology examines the cogito as a pure intuition, and as an act of pure 
consciousness. 
Husserl describes noesis and noema as two phases of intentionality. Noesis is the 
process of cogitation, while the noemata (or cogitata) are that which is cogitated.
Every intentional experience has a noetic (real) phase and a noematic (non-real) 
phase. Every noetic phase of consciousness corresponds to a noematic phase of 
consciousness. Noesis is a process of reasoning that assigns meaning to intentional 
objects. Both noesis and noema may be sources of objective meaning. The noetic 
meaning of transcendent objects is discoverable by reason, while the noematic 
meaning of immanent objects is discoverable by pure intuition. Noetic meaning is 
transcendent, while noematic meaning is immanent. 
Thus, noesis and noema correspond respectively to experience and essence. 
Existential phenomenology 
Existential phenomenology differs from transcendental phenomenology by its 
rejection of the transcendental ego. Merleau-Ponty objects to the ego's 
transcendence of the world, which for Husserl leaves the world spread out and 
completely transparent before the conscious. Heidegger thinks of a conscious being 
as always already in the world. Transcendence is maintained in existential 
phenomenology to the extent that the method of phenomenology must take a 
presuppositionless starting point - transcending claims about the world arising 
from, for example, natural or scientific attitudes or theories of 
the ontological nature of the world. 
While Husserl thought of philosophy as a scientific discipline that had to be 
founded on a phenomenology understood as epistemology, Heidegger held a 
radically different view. Heidegger himself states their differences this way: 
For Husserl, the phenomenological reduction is the method of leading 
phenomenological vision from the natural attitude of the human being whose life is 
involved in the world of things and persons back to the transcendental life of 
consciousness and its noetic-noematic experiences, in which objects are constituted 
as correlates of consciousness. For us, phenomenological reduction means leading 
phenomenological vision back from the apprehension of a being, whatever may be 
the character of that apprehension, to the understanding of the Being of this being 
(projecting upon the way it is unconcealed). 
According to Heidegger, philosophy was not at all a scientific discipline, but more 
fundamental than science itself. According to him science is only one way of 
knowing the world with no special access to truth. Furthermore, the scientific 
mindset itself is built on a much more "primordial" foundation of practical,
everyday knowledge. Husserl was skeptical of this approach, which he regarded as 
quasi-mystical, and it contributed to the divergence in their thinking. 
Instead of taking phenomenology as prima philosophia or a foundational 
discipline, Heidegger took it as a metaphysical ontology: "being is the proper and 
sole theme of philosophy... this means that philosophy is not a science of beings 
but of being.". Yet to confuse phenomenology and ontology is an obvious error. 
Phenomena are not the foundation or Ground of Being. Neither are they 
appearances, for, as Heidegger argues in Being and Time, an appearance is "that 
which shows itself in something else," while a phenomenon is "that which shows 
itself in itself." 
While for Husserl, in the epoché, being appeared only as a correlate of 
consciousness, for Heidegger being is the starting point. While for Husserl we 
would have to abstract from all concrete determinations of our empirical ego, to be 
able to turn to the field of pure consciousness, Heidegger claims that "the 
possibilities and destinies of philosophy are bound up with man's existence, and 
thus with temporality and with historicality. 
However, ontological being and existential being are different categories, so 
Heidegger's conflation of these categories is, according to Husserl's view, the root 
of Heidegger's error. Husserl charged Heidegger with raising the question of 
ontology but failing to answer it, instead switching the topic to the Dasein, the only 
being for whom being is an issue. That is neither ontology nor phenomenology, 
according to Husserl, but merely abstract anthropology. To clarify, perhaps, by 
abstract anthropology, as a non-existentialist searching for essences, Husserl 
rejected the existentialism implicit in Heidegger's distinction between being (sein) 
as things in reality and Being (Dasein) as the encounter with being, as when being 
becomes present to us, that is, is unconcealed. 
Existential phenomenologists include: Martin Heidegger (1889–1976), Hannah 
Arendt (1906–1975), Emmanuel Levinas (1906–1995), Gabriel Marcel (1889– 
1973),Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980), Paul Ricoeur (1913–2005) and Maurice 
Merleau-Ponty (1908–1961). 
Eastern thoughts 
Some researchers in phenomenology (in particular in reference to Heidegger's 
legacy) it has been claimed that a number of elements within phenomenology 
(mainly Heidegger's thought) have some resonance with Eastern philosophical
ideas, particularly with Zen Buddhism and Taoism According to Tomonubu 
Imamichi, the concept of Dasein was inspired — although Heidegger remained 
silent on this — by Okakura Kakuzo's concept of das-in-der-Welt-sein (being in 
the world) expressed in The Book of Tea to describe Zhuangzi's philosophy, 
which Imamichi's teacher had offered to Heidegger in 1919, after having 
studied with him the year before. 
There are also recent signs of the reception of phenomenology (and Heidegger's 
thought in particular) within scholarly circles focused on studying the impetus 
ofmetaphysics in the history of ideas in Islam and Early Islamic 
philosophy; perhaps under the indirect influence of the tradition of the French 
Orientalist and philosopher Henri Corbin. 
In addition, the work of Jim Ruddy in the field of comparative philosophy, 
combined the concept of Transcendental Ego in Husserl's phenomenology with 
the concept of the primacy of self-consciousness in the work of Sankaracharya. 
In the course of this work, Ruddy uncovered a wholly new eidetic 
phenomenological science, which he called "convergent phenomenology." This 
new phenomenology takes over where Husserl left off, and deals with the 
constitution of relation-like, rather than merely thing-like, or "intentional" 
objectivity. 
Technoethics 
Phenomenological approach to technology 
James Moor has argued that computers show up policy vacuums that require 
new thinking and the establishment of new policies. Others have argued that the 
resources provided by classical ethical theory such 
as utilitarianism, consequentialism and deontological ethics is more than 
enough to deal with all the ethical issues emerging from our design and use of 
information technology. 
For the phenomenologist the ‘impact view’ of technology as well as the 
constructivist view of the technology/society relationships is valid but not 
adequate (Heidegger 1977, Borgmann 1985, Winograd and Flores 1987, Ihde 
1990, Dreyfus 1992, 2001). They argue that these accounts of technology, and 
the technology/societyrelationship, posit technology and society as if speaking 
about the one does not immediately and already draw upon the other for its 
ongoing sense or meaning. For the 
phenomenologist, society and technology co-constitute each other; they are
each other's ongoing condition, or possibility for being what they are. For them 
technology is not just the artifact. Rather, the artifact already emerges from a 
prior ‘technological’ attitude towards the world (Heidegger 1977). 
Summary: 
Phenomenology is concerned with the relationship between the reality which exists 
outside our minds (objective reality) and the variety of thoughts and ideas each of 
us may have about reality (subjectivity( . From the phenomenological approach we 
experience the phenomena in the world rather than the world itself. 
Phenomenology first emerged as a distinctive philosophical discipline with 
Husserl. ”To the things themselves” was Husserl’s approach. The aim of 
phenomenology is to bypass the presuppositions built into traditional theories 
(including psychology, physiology and epistemology) in order to describe what 
shows up in the flow of lived experience prior to reflection (Dancy & Sosa, 
1996:342).The key discovery is that all forms of consciousness are characterized 
by intentionality, a directness towards things such that consciousness is always 
about or of something. 
Husserl officially defined the science of phenomenology as the study of the 
essence of conscious experience, and especially of intentional experience , and he 
defined consciousness as “pure” rational, mental activity, and developed a theory 
of the essential structures of consciousness in terms of the parts and moments of 
our mental acts . Husserl called the method the phenomenological reduction 
or epoché. By carrying out the reduction we abandon the “natural” or “naturalistic” 
attitude which takes the world for granted and come to adopt instead the 
phenomenological or the “transcendental” attitude. The use of the method includes 
the grasp of consciousness being directed towards an object; consciousness is 
consciousness of something, and that such attention involves no concern for 
whether these objects really exist. As we have seen, Heidegger´s investigation of 
being is phenomenological. As method phenomenology has much to offer 
psychotherapy in the sense of searching for meaning and what is being qua being. 
All psychological theories are about the human being, but here most similarities 
end. There are many different theories and approaches to psychotherapy. By a 
phenomenological method it might be possible to investigate the science of 
psychology to pursue a more adequate understanding of the central concerns of
psychology. Heidegger’s conception of authenticity might help us make sense of 
dimensions of therapeutic practice, by providing a basis for understanding our 
embeddedness in a wider context of meaning . 
It seems that in the Scandinavian countries there are some resistance against 
existential psychotherapy and phenomenological psychology in both the academic 
field as well as in the practical field (official hospitals etc). But interesting enough, 
a lot of students both in psychology and philosophy addresses this topic with great 
interest. I believe the future will look different. My guess and hope is that the same 
will happen in the field of existential psychotherapy.
References: 
 Zahavi, Dan (2003), Husserl's Phenomenology, Stanford: Stanford University Press 
 Jump up ^ Orbe, Mark P. (2009). Phenomenology. In S. Littlejohn, & K. Foss (Eds.), 
Encyclopedia of communication theory. (pp. 750-752). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE 
Publications, Inc. 
 Jump up ^ Rollinger, Robin (1999), Husserl's Position in the School of Brentano, 
Dordrecht / Boston / London: Kluwer 
 Jump up ^ Husserl, Edmund. The Crisis of the European Sciences and Transcendental 
Phenomenology. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1970, pg. 240 
 http://www.angelfire.com/md2/timewarp/husserl.html 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenomenology_(philosophy) 
 http://www.filosofiskpraksis.com/index-filer/index-fagartikler-filer/page499.htm 
 http://ndpr.nd.edu/news/49329-phenomenology-and-embodiment-husserl-and-the-constitution- 
of-subjectivity/ 
Written by: 
Nadine Al-Qafee

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Phenomenology by husserl

  • 1. qwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyui opasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfgh jklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvb nmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwer Phenomenology and Husserl tyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopas Post structuralist Approaches to Language and Culture dfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzx Nadine Al-Qafee cvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmq wertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuio pasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghj klzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbn mqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwerty uiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdf ghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxc vbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmrty uiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdf ghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxc vbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqw
  • 2. Introduction Phenomenology is the philosophical study of the structures of experience and consciousness. As a philosophical movement it was founded in the early years of the 20th century by Edmund Husserl. What is phenomenology? Husserl argued that phenomenology did not deny the existence of the real world, but sought instead to clarify the sense of this world (which everyone accepts) as actually existing. Husserl lays out what we already have going on: Typical acts of consciousness - he assigns them as two spheres: they are worldly; they are “psychological”. The Two Spheres: The two spheres are connected only by the mind’s ability to pass between them as easily as it can meander around and through them; the mind also can combine, linger within, focus and disperse. I can just imagine these spheres just like an example of a (Cow) for a normal person cow is only a cow but for Indian it’s a holy cow and if I dreamed of a cow will not make a different but if an Indian dreamed of that …. Then things will go another direction of being holy person or a good thing coming up to their life and so on .
  • 3. Husserl believes there is a third unity - that of the consciousness, where experiences and intuition act out their part. Husserl’s task is to get from these spheres and into this other field that is quite unlike them: he calls this the sphere of absolute consciousness and it encompasses the Living unity of Consciousness as it flows along in a stream of experiences. Each of these three unities has and exhibits its own distinctive kind of identity and persistence. For example, you can tell when the object occupying your consciousness is a physical thing because it does not present itself all at once. Instead, you are invited into a perspective, to move around from one side to the other, to perceive some more about the thing. All the while, the thing keeps it’s unity to itself, as the reference point of all the angles it gives you. However, the essences give themselves to you all at once. You do not have to consider the north face of a building and then a south face to get the whole picture. But the third unity, consciousness, while it can present itself as essence or fact, it is always contextualized as a foreground. To get to the sphere of absolute consciousness, you have to let the worldly go away and then inhabit what’s left. To inhabit what’s left, you must look to the Phenomenological method.
  • 4. What is the phenomenological method? Husserl tells us why we need the method of Phenomenological Reduction: A general example of the concept of reduction can be taken from a piece of wax: The wax appears to be flat, opaque, hard and extended to certain dimensions in space. Most of these quantities can be negated as necessary to the piece of wax continuing to be a piece of wax. The smell, taste, texture, if heated will continue to be the same piece of wax, however the small, taste and texture will obviously have changed. The only things that remain (mass, chemical makeup) are the things that are required for its existence. Husserl uses eidetic Phenomenological Reduction: he calls it bracketing away /suspending / disconnecting. It seeks to momentarily reduce, effectively erase the world of speculation by returning the subject to their primordial experience of the matter, whether the object of inquiry is a feeling, an idea or a perception. Bracketing (epoche) is the act of suspending judgment about the natural world. The systematic removal (SLIDE: The pealing onion) one by one, of the inessential aspects,the symbolic meanings, context, to get to the core: leaving only the essence of what constitutes the thing. Thus, one’s subjective perception is the truest form of experience one can have in perceiving it. This allows one to examine phenomena as they are originally given to consciousness. It involves setting aside the question of real existence, as well as questions about its physical nature; these questions are left to the natural sciences. For example, the experience of seeing a tree qualifies as an experience, whether the tree appears in reality, in a dream or in a hallucination. (Reminds us of my thopoeic thought). We are to suspend belief in what we ordinarily take for granted. Husserl tells us we need to reduce the natural world to its pure consciousness, so that what we are left with is a pure framework with which to consider the mindset and methodology of phenomenology.
  • 5. The procedure of bracketing is essential: the phenomenological reduction helps us to free ourselves from prejudices and secure the purity of our detachment as observers, so that we can encounter “things as they are in themselves” independently of any presuppositions. The goal of phenomenology for Husserl is then a descriptive, detached. Phenomenological reduction is also a method of bracketing empirical intuitions away from philosophical inquiry, by refraining from making judgments upon them. Husserl uses the term epoche (Greek, for "a cessation") to refer to this suspension of judgment regarding the true nature of reality. Bracketed judgment is an epoche or suspension of inquiry, which places in brackets whatever facts belong to essential being. Bracketing is also a neutralization of belief. "Doxic positing" (the positing of belief) may be actual or potential. Doxic positing may occur in every kind of consciousness, because every consciousness may actually or potentially posit something about being. analysis of consciousness in which objects, as its correlates, are constituted. And So, while phenomenology is primarily concerned with the systematic reflection and analysis of the structures of consciousness, it is to take place from a highly modified “first person” viewpoint: studying phenomena not as they appear to “my” consciousness, but to any consciousness whatsoever. Husserl believed that phenomenology could provide a firm basis for all human knowledge, including scientific knowledge, and could establish philosophy as a rigorous science. Now let’s talk about ideas of Phenomenology: The Ideas are divided into four sections: (1) The Nature and Knowledge of Essential Being, (2) The Fundamental Phenomenological Outlook, (3) Procedure of Pure Phenomenology In Respect of Methods and Problems," (4) Reason and Reality." The first section describes how the realm of essence differs from the realm of facts. The second section describes how phenomenological reduction may be used as a method of philosophical inquiry. The third section describes
  • 6. how noesis and noema may be defined as phases of intentionality. The fourth section describes the relation between consciousness and noematic meaning. Husserl distinguishes between phenomenology as a science of pure consciousness and psychology as a science of empirical facts. For Husserl, the realm of pure consciousness is distinct from the realm of real experience. Husserl explains that phenomenology is a theory of pure phenomena, and that it is not a theory of actual experiences (or of actual facts or realities). According to Husserl, essential being must be distinguished from actual existence, just as the pure ego must be distinguished from the psychological ego. Essences are non-real, while facts are real. The realm of transcendentally reduced phenomena is non-real, while the realm of actual experience is real. Thus, phenomenological reduction leads from knowledge of the essentially real to knowledge of the essentially non-real. Phenomenological reduction is a process of defining the pure essence of a psychological phenomenon. It is a process whereby empirical subjectivity is suspended, so that pure consciousness may be defined in its essential and absolute being. This is accomplished by a method of "bracketing" empirical data away from consideration. "Bracketing" empirical data away from further investigation leaves pure consciousness, pure phenomena, and the pure ego as the residue of phenomenological reduction. Facts or realities are the objective data of empirical intution, says Husserl, but essences are the objective data of essential intuition. Empirical intuition may lead to essential intuition (or essential insight), which may be adequate or inadequate in terms of its clearness and distinctness. Empirical or non-empirical objects may have varying degrees of intuitability, and empirical or non-empirical intuitions may vary in their clearness and distinctness. Non-empirical intuitions may apprehend objects that are produced by fantasy or imagination. Husserl describes consciousness as intentional insofar as it refers to, or is directed at, an object. Intentionality is a property of directedness toward an object. Consciousness may have intentional and non-intentional phases, but intentionality is the property that gives consciousness its objective meaning. The cogito ("I think") is the principle of the pure ego. The pure ego performs acts of consciousness (cogitations) that may be immanently or transcendently directed. Immanently directed acts of consciousness refer to objects that are within the same ego or that belong to the same stream of consciousness. Transcendently directed
  • 7. acts of consciousness refer to objects that are outside the ego or that belong to a different stream of consciousness. The objects of consciousness (cogitata) are the embodied or unembodied things that are perceived and consciously experienced. The difference between immanent and transcendent perception reflects the difference between being as experience and being as thing.1 Things as they exist in themselves cannot be perceived immanently, and they can only be perceived transcendently. The difference between immanent and transcendent perception also reflects the difference in the way in which things are given and presented to consciousness. Givenness may be adequate or inadequate in terms of its clearness and distinctness, and in terms of its intuitability. Immanently perceived objects have an absolute being insofar as their existence is logically necessary. The existence of transcendently perceived objects is not logically necessary, insofar as their existence is not proved by the being of conciousness itself. Consciousness itself is absolute being, but the spatial-temporal world is merely phenomenal being. Husserl emphasizes that phenomenology is concerned with the essence of whatever is immanent in consciousness, and that it is concerned with describing immanent essences. To confuse the essences of things with the mental representations of those essences is to confuse the aims of phenomenology and psychology. Phenomenology is a descriptive analysis of being as consciousness, while psychology is a descriptive analysis of being as reality. The difference between being as consciousness and being as reality is also the difference between transcendental and transcendent being. Every actual cogito has an intentional object (and is a mode of thinking about something). The cogito itself may become a cogitatum if the principle that "I think" becomes an object of consciousness. Thus, in the cogito, the act of thinking may become an intentional object. However, in contrast to the Cartesian principle that "I think, therefore I am" (cogito ergo sum), the phenomenologically reduced cogito is a suspension of judgment about whether "I am" or whether "I exist." The phenomenologically reduced cogito is a suspension of judgment about the question of whether thinking implies existence. Thus, phenomenology examines the cogito as a pure intuition, and as an act of pure consciousness. Husserl describes noesis and noema as two phases of intentionality. Noesis is the process of cogitation, while the noemata (or cogitata) are that which is cogitated.
  • 8. Every intentional experience has a noetic (real) phase and a noematic (non-real) phase. Every noetic phase of consciousness corresponds to a noematic phase of consciousness. Noesis is a process of reasoning that assigns meaning to intentional objects. Both noesis and noema may be sources of objective meaning. The noetic meaning of transcendent objects is discoverable by reason, while the noematic meaning of immanent objects is discoverable by pure intuition. Noetic meaning is transcendent, while noematic meaning is immanent. Thus, noesis and noema correspond respectively to experience and essence. Existential phenomenology Existential phenomenology differs from transcendental phenomenology by its rejection of the transcendental ego. Merleau-Ponty objects to the ego's transcendence of the world, which for Husserl leaves the world spread out and completely transparent before the conscious. Heidegger thinks of a conscious being as always already in the world. Transcendence is maintained in existential phenomenology to the extent that the method of phenomenology must take a presuppositionless starting point - transcending claims about the world arising from, for example, natural or scientific attitudes or theories of the ontological nature of the world. While Husserl thought of philosophy as a scientific discipline that had to be founded on a phenomenology understood as epistemology, Heidegger held a radically different view. Heidegger himself states their differences this way: For Husserl, the phenomenological reduction is the method of leading phenomenological vision from the natural attitude of the human being whose life is involved in the world of things and persons back to the transcendental life of consciousness and its noetic-noematic experiences, in which objects are constituted as correlates of consciousness. For us, phenomenological reduction means leading phenomenological vision back from the apprehension of a being, whatever may be the character of that apprehension, to the understanding of the Being of this being (projecting upon the way it is unconcealed). According to Heidegger, philosophy was not at all a scientific discipline, but more fundamental than science itself. According to him science is only one way of knowing the world with no special access to truth. Furthermore, the scientific mindset itself is built on a much more "primordial" foundation of practical,
  • 9. everyday knowledge. Husserl was skeptical of this approach, which he regarded as quasi-mystical, and it contributed to the divergence in their thinking. Instead of taking phenomenology as prima philosophia or a foundational discipline, Heidegger took it as a metaphysical ontology: "being is the proper and sole theme of philosophy... this means that philosophy is not a science of beings but of being.". Yet to confuse phenomenology and ontology is an obvious error. Phenomena are not the foundation or Ground of Being. Neither are they appearances, for, as Heidegger argues in Being and Time, an appearance is "that which shows itself in something else," while a phenomenon is "that which shows itself in itself." While for Husserl, in the epoché, being appeared only as a correlate of consciousness, for Heidegger being is the starting point. While for Husserl we would have to abstract from all concrete determinations of our empirical ego, to be able to turn to the field of pure consciousness, Heidegger claims that "the possibilities and destinies of philosophy are bound up with man's existence, and thus with temporality and with historicality. However, ontological being and existential being are different categories, so Heidegger's conflation of these categories is, according to Husserl's view, the root of Heidegger's error. Husserl charged Heidegger with raising the question of ontology but failing to answer it, instead switching the topic to the Dasein, the only being for whom being is an issue. That is neither ontology nor phenomenology, according to Husserl, but merely abstract anthropology. To clarify, perhaps, by abstract anthropology, as a non-existentialist searching for essences, Husserl rejected the existentialism implicit in Heidegger's distinction between being (sein) as things in reality and Being (Dasein) as the encounter with being, as when being becomes present to us, that is, is unconcealed. Existential phenomenologists include: Martin Heidegger (1889–1976), Hannah Arendt (1906–1975), Emmanuel Levinas (1906–1995), Gabriel Marcel (1889– 1973),Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980), Paul Ricoeur (1913–2005) and Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908–1961). Eastern thoughts Some researchers in phenomenology (in particular in reference to Heidegger's legacy) it has been claimed that a number of elements within phenomenology (mainly Heidegger's thought) have some resonance with Eastern philosophical
  • 10. ideas, particularly with Zen Buddhism and Taoism According to Tomonubu Imamichi, the concept of Dasein was inspired — although Heidegger remained silent on this — by Okakura Kakuzo's concept of das-in-der-Welt-sein (being in the world) expressed in The Book of Tea to describe Zhuangzi's philosophy, which Imamichi's teacher had offered to Heidegger in 1919, after having studied with him the year before. There are also recent signs of the reception of phenomenology (and Heidegger's thought in particular) within scholarly circles focused on studying the impetus ofmetaphysics in the history of ideas in Islam and Early Islamic philosophy; perhaps under the indirect influence of the tradition of the French Orientalist and philosopher Henri Corbin. In addition, the work of Jim Ruddy in the field of comparative philosophy, combined the concept of Transcendental Ego in Husserl's phenomenology with the concept of the primacy of self-consciousness in the work of Sankaracharya. In the course of this work, Ruddy uncovered a wholly new eidetic phenomenological science, which he called "convergent phenomenology." This new phenomenology takes over where Husserl left off, and deals with the constitution of relation-like, rather than merely thing-like, or "intentional" objectivity. Technoethics Phenomenological approach to technology James Moor has argued that computers show up policy vacuums that require new thinking and the establishment of new policies. Others have argued that the resources provided by classical ethical theory such as utilitarianism, consequentialism and deontological ethics is more than enough to deal with all the ethical issues emerging from our design and use of information technology. For the phenomenologist the ‘impact view’ of technology as well as the constructivist view of the technology/society relationships is valid but not adequate (Heidegger 1977, Borgmann 1985, Winograd and Flores 1987, Ihde 1990, Dreyfus 1992, 2001). They argue that these accounts of technology, and the technology/societyrelationship, posit technology and society as if speaking about the one does not immediately and already draw upon the other for its ongoing sense or meaning. For the phenomenologist, society and technology co-constitute each other; they are
  • 11. each other's ongoing condition, or possibility for being what they are. For them technology is not just the artifact. Rather, the artifact already emerges from a prior ‘technological’ attitude towards the world (Heidegger 1977). Summary: Phenomenology is concerned with the relationship between the reality which exists outside our minds (objective reality) and the variety of thoughts and ideas each of us may have about reality (subjectivity( . From the phenomenological approach we experience the phenomena in the world rather than the world itself. Phenomenology first emerged as a distinctive philosophical discipline with Husserl. ”To the things themselves” was Husserl’s approach. The aim of phenomenology is to bypass the presuppositions built into traditional theories (including psychology, physiology and epistemology) in order to describe what shows up in the flow of lived experience prior to reflection (Dancy & Sosa, 1996:342).The key discovery is that all forms of consciousness are characterized by intentionality, a directness towards things such that consciousness is always about or of something. Husserl officially defined the science of phenomenology as the study of the essence of conscious experience, and especially of intentional experience , and he defined consciousness as “pure” rational, mental activity, and developed a theory of the essential structures of consciousness in terms of the parts and moments of our mental acts . Husserl called the method the phenomenological reduction or epoché. By carrying out the reduction we abandon the “natural” or “naturalistic” attitude which takes the world for granted and come to adopt instead the phenomenological or the “transcendental” attitude. The use of the method includes the grasp of consciousness being directed towards an object; consciousness is consciousness of something, and that such attention involves no concern for whether these objects really exist. As we have seen, Heidegger´s investigation of being is phenomenological. As method phenomenology has much to offer psychotherapy in the sense of searching for meaning and what is being qua being. All psychological theories are about the human being, but here most similarities end. There are many different theories and approaches to psychotherapy. By a phenomenological method it might be possible to investigate the science of psychology to pursue a more adequate understanding of the central concerns of
  • 12. psychology. Heidegger’s conception of authenticity might help us make sense of dimensions of therapeutic practice, by providing a basis for understanding our embeddedness in a wider context of meaning . It seems that in the Scandinavian countries there are some resistance against existential psychotherapy and phenomenological psychology in both the academic field as well as in the practical field (official hospitals etc). But interesting enough, a lot of students both in psychology and philosophy addresses this topic with great interest. I believe the future will look different. My guess and hope is that the same will happen in the field of existential psychotherapy.
  • 13. References:  Zahavi, Dan (2003), Husserl's Phenomenology, Stanford: Stanford University Press  Jump up ^ Orbe, Mark P. (2009). Phenomenology. In S. Littlejohn, & K. Foss (Eds.), Encyclopedia of communication theory. (pp. 750-752). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, Inc.  Jump up ^ Rollinger, Robin (1999), Husserl's Position in the School of Brentano, Dordrecht / Boston / London: Kluwer  Jump up ^ Husserl, Edmund. The Crisis of the European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1970, pg. 240  http://www.angelfire.com/md2/timewarp/husserl.html  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenomenology_(philosophy)  http://www.filosofiskpraksis.com/index-filer/index-fagartikler-filer/page499.htm  http://ndpr.nd.edu/news/49329-phenomenology-and-embodiment-husserl-and-the-constitution- of-subjectivity/ Written by: Nadine Al-Qafee