"Phenomenology of death" Essays and Research Papers

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    THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF DEATH The first time happened eleven years ago‚ I was 7 years old that time. Everyone was crying and hugging each other. Some were talking to me‚ with tears in their eyes‚ uttering words I cannot understand. My mother was crying‚ too. Then I cried‚ though it was not clear to me what was happening. I just saw my father lying on a box‚ slowly placed on a deep hole. Then some men plowed the soil and covered the hole where my father was in. Four years later‚ the second time‚

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    Phenomenology

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    Phenomenology (architecture) http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/phenomenology/#1 From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation‚ search Phenomenology is both a philosophical design current in contemporary architecture and a specific field of academic research‚ based on the physical experience of building materials and their sensory properties. Beginning in the 1970s‚ phenomenology‚ with a strong influence from the writings of Martin Heidegger‚ began to have

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    Phenomenology in Sociology Gurwitsch A 1966 Studies in Phenomenology and Psychology. Northwestern University Press‚ Evanston‚ IL Gurwitsch A 1979 Human Encounters in the Social World (ed. Me! traux A‚ trans. Kersten F). Duquesne University Press‚ Pittsburgh‚ PA Heidegger M 1962 Being and Time (trans. Macquarrie J‚ Robinson E). Harper & Row‚ New York Herzog M 1992 Phanomenologische Psychologie—Grundlagen W und Entwicklung (Phenomenological Psychology—Foundations and Development). Asanger

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    Bose Chan N15021335 Existentialism and phenomenology: Interpretive writing assignment The passage speaks of the thought process that Husserl had in extracting himself from the empirical world to that of the transcendental. By means of a deliberate effort perceive from out of the local epoche‚ which is another meaning for cessation‚ only then one would be able to discover the essence of meanings and objects. The problem Husserl had an issue with the conventional methodology of experiencing

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    Husserl's Phenomenology

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    Why is phenomenology such an important branch of philosophical thought in terms of understanding media and its social‚ political‚ and technological impact? Phenomenology is the philosophical thought that focuses on the structure of subjective human consciousness. This philosophical movement was founded by Edmund Husserl who “wants to describe our experiences as they are given from a first person perspective” (Zahavi‚ 2003‚ p.13). Husserl describes the conception of reality in 3 parts. Firstly

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    Phenomenology of Love

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    Love is something that means very different things to different people. For some‚ love can be purely romantic‚ or even purely sexual. For others‚ real love is utterly unconditional and only truly exists between family members‚ or between people and a deity. And for some people‚ love is fluid‚ ever changing‚ and everywhere‚ and is felt for family‚ friends‚ partners‚ pets‚ and even inanimate objects‚ dead artists‚ and fictional characters. None of these people would be right or wrong‚ but one thing

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    The question of what phenomenology is and what it does seems to be a relatively straight-forward question with a rather complex answer. In his Introduction to Phenomenology‚ Robert Sokolowski states that "phenomenology offers the pleasure of philosophy for those who wish to enjoy it" (15). This is a very fundamental and basic sentence‚ but nonetheless extremely important in the philosophy of phenomenology. In order to truly understand the importance of this simple sentence however‚ one must first

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    Phenomenology of Reflection Each time an individual rediscovers revolt he remembers his previous experiences of it‚ which all come back to him like a sudden memory of childhood. We know that “whether the subject sinks into madness‚ practices theory‚ or participates in an uprising . . . the two poles of daily life — contact with a narrow and separate reality on one hand and spectacular contact with the totality on the other — are simultaneously abolished‚ opening the way for the unity of individual

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    Phenomenology of Love

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    Love is a very mysterious thing. Most of us act as though we know what it is without truly understanding its meaning and essence. This has been true of me. Before I encountered this phenomenology of love‚ I already had experiences of loving other people – my family‚ my friends‚ and girlfriends past and present. However‚ I was belonged to the people whom Erich Fromm described as believing in the popular notion of love. I emphasized the characteristics of the people I loved‚ why I needed them‚ and

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    Phenomenology is Form and Function: The International Buddhist Temple Phenomenology will sometimes incorporate spirituality into intellectual arguments with place and space‚ and argues that we have more than our five senses to experience the world around us – that even if you were blind‚ deaf‚ couldn’t smell‚ couldn’t taste‚ and had no form of sensory perception‚ the place that you are in could still effect you. The qualities of a place that you can not define through your senses is what explains

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