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Phenomenology (sociology)

Phenomenology within sociology, or phenomenological sociology, examines the concept of social reality (German: Lebenswelt or "Lifeworld") as a product of intersubjectivity. Phenomenology analyses social reality in order to explain the formation and nature of social institutions.[1] The application of phenomenological ideas in sociology differs from other social science applications of social science applications.

Context edit

Having developed the initial groundwork for philosophical phenomenology, Edmund Husserl set out to create a method for understanding the properties and structures of consciousness such as, emotions, perceptions of meaning, and aesthetic judgement.[2]

Social phenomenologists talk about the social construction of reality. They view social order as a creation of everyday interaction, often looking at conversations to find the methods that people use to maintain social relations.[3]

The leading exponent of Phenomenological Sociology was Alfred Schütz (1899–1959). Schütz sought to provide a critical philosophical foundation for Max Weber's interpretive sociology (verstehende Soziologie) by applying methods and insights derived from the philosophy of Husserl to the study of the social world.[4][5] It is the building of this bridge between Husserlian phenomenology and Weberian sociology that serves as the starting point for contemporary phenomenological sociology.

Not all versions of phenomenological sociology are based on Weberian themes. There is some historical evidence that suggests elements of Weberian sociology are themselves based on certain phenomenological themes, especially in regard to the theory of the intended meaning of an act and ideas regarding theory and concept formation.[6] Weber may have taken influence from Wilhelm Dilthey's theory of Weltanschauung, who may have also taken from Husserl's theory of meaning.[7]

While Husserl's work was intended to understand how we reflect on the structures of consciousness in its own right, Schütz was concerned with the relationship between the Lebenswelt ("Lifeworld") and human action.[8] Husserl's work was conducted as a transcendental phenomenology of consciousness. Schütz's work was conducted as a mundane phenomenology of the social world.[9] Their projects differ in level of analysis, topics of study, and the type of phenomenological reduction used in analysis.

Ultimately these two distinct projects should be seen as complementary, with the studies of the latter dependent on the studies of the former. That is, valid phenomenological descriptions of the social reality should be consistent with the descriptions of intentional consciousness. It is from Husserl's work that Schütz' derives its meaning and verifiability.[10] This is in keeping with Husserl's conception of phenomenology as "First Philosophy", the foundation, or ground, for both philosophy and all of the sciences.[11]

Core assumptions edit

Phenomenology takes it that social reality does not take place empirically or in any objective sense. Its various manifestations, such as institutions, organizations, social classes, and so on, are thought to be caused by lived social reality.[12] In this way, these manifestations of social reality are considered "objects-constituted-in-and-for-consciousness".[13] The process by which these manifestations come into being as products of consciousness is referred to in sociology as typification.

In Husserl's 'Ideas I', he defines a concept he calls "the general thesis Natural Attitude" as "state of affairs in which we live before we have engaged in philosophy" or as the assumption that "the world is" as we literally perceive it in consciousness.[14] The general thesis of the Natural Attitude is the ideational foundation for our everyday social experience. It unites the world of individual objects into a unified world of meaning, which we assume is shared by any and all who share our culture.[15] The Natural Attitude forms the underpinning for our thoughts and actions. It is the mental projection of a belief that a naturally occurring social world is both factually objective in its existential status, and unquestioned in its "natural" appearance. According to the Natural Attitude, social objects (persons, language, institutions, etc.) have the same existential status as objects occurring in nature (rocks, trees, and animals, etc.).

Although it is often referred to as the "General Thesis of the Natural Attitude", it is not a thesis in the formal sense of the term, but a non-thematic assumption, or belief, that underlies our sense of the objectivity and facticity of the world, and the objects appearing in this world. The facticity of this world of common sense is both unquestioned and virtually "unquestionable;" it is sanctionable as to its status as that which "is", and that which "everyone", or, at least, "any reasonable person", agrees to be the case with regard to the factual character of the world. As far as traditional social science is concerned, this taken-for-granted world of social facts is the starting and end point for any and all investigations of the social world. It provides the raw, observable, taken-for-granted "data" upon which the findings of the social sciences are idealized, conceptualized, and offered up for analysis and discourse. Within traditional social science, this "data" is formulated into a second order world of abstractions and idealizations constituted in accordance with these sciences' modelling schemes.[11]

Schutz's phenomenological descriptions are made from within the Phenomenological Attitude, which follows the process of phenomenological reduction (epoché), which suspends the Natural Attitude and reveals the phenomena occurring within the Natural Attitude of the mind as manifestations of the non-objective mental world.

Stock of knowledge edit

The term "stock of knowledge" was coined by Schütz.[16][17][15] This concept is vital to phenomenological sociologists and their claim that social reality is intersubjective. While phenomenologists tend to focus on establishing the structures of "intentional consciousness", as Husserl calls it,[18] proponents of phenomenological sociology are interested in the structures of the "lifeworld".[19] The latter refers to the world as directly experienced through the subjectivity of everyday life. As we go through our everyday lives, we draw on our stocks of knowledge to make interpretations. The "stock of knowledge" is typically a "deep background configuration"[20] of a series of past experiences comprising: "one's native language and linguistic rules; conventional modes of interpreting expressions and events; numerous theories and methods; aural and visual forms; shared cultural and normative understandings, and the like."[17] Schütz argued that all "interpretation of this world is based upon a stock of previous experiences of it."[21]

Reduction edit

Martin Heidegger characterizes Husserl's phenomenological research project as, "the analytic description of intentionality in its a priori;"[22] as it is the phenomenon of intentionality which provides the mode of access for conducting any and all phenomenological investigations, and the ultimate ground or foundation guaranteeing any findings resulting from any such inquiry. In recognizing consciousness as having the formal structure of intentionality, as always having consciousness of an intended object, Husserlian phenomenology has located the access point to a radical new form of scientific description.

Methodologically, access to this field is obtained through the phenomenological reduction. While there is some controversy as to the official name, number, and levels of the reduction, this internal argument among the philosophers need not concern us. For the purposes of a mundane phenomenology of the social world, we, as phenomenological social scientists, engage in a mundane phenomenological reduction called the Epoché. The hallmark of this form of the reduction is what it reveals about its field of inquiry: a mundane phenomenology of the social world defines its phenomenal field as the intersubjective region of mundane consciousness as appearing from within the natural attitude.

The phenomenological reduction as applied to a mundane analysis of the social world consists of the bracketing [equivalents: methodical disregard, putting out of play, suspension] of the thesis of the natural attitude. This bracketing is nothing more than a bracketing of the existential belief in the existence of the objective world; the existential status of the world itself is not called into question. The result of this bracketing is that our attention is shifted from the objects in the world as they occur in nature, to the objects in the world as they appear for consciousness – as phenomenon for intentional consciousness. Our descriptions of objects in the world are now transformed from the naive descriptions of objects as occurring in nature, to phenomenological descriptions of objects as appearing for consciousness. In short, for the purpose of a mundane phenomenological analysis within the natural attitude, the epoche transforms objects as occurring in nature into: objects-for-subjectivity, objects-for-consciousness, objects-as-intended.

Keep in mind that for positivism, the meaning of an object is, by definition, "objective". That is, the meaning of the object is a property of the object itself, is independent of any particular observer, and "the same" for any and all observers regardless of their orientation or perspective. For phenomenology, an object is always intended, and constituted, as meaningful by a particular intending subject from a particular orientation and from a particular perspectival viewing point. In addition, phenomenologically speaking, the meaning of the object cannot be separated from its phenomenality, or materiality, and cannot be constituted qua meaningful object without the meaning bestowing act of intending on the part of a constituting subject.

For a phenomenology undertaken within the natural attitude, meaning does not inherently accrue to an object as a thing-in-itself, is not an "add-on" to the object (a label), and is not separable from the object as constituted by the intending subject in the act of meaning constitution. For phenomenology, the meaning and the object (in its "materiality") are co-constituted in the intending of the object by the subject—phenomenologically speaking there are only meaningful objects. There is no such thing as a neutrally valued object, or a meaningless object, and the notion of an object as "nonsense" is itself a meaningful determination – as the existentialists would say, we are condemned to meaning.

Note that, because we as observers have already been born into an already-existing social world that is already pre-interpreted – through both social meanings and through architectural and business intentionality – and 'made meaningful-to-us' as an intersubjectively available "entity", any proposal that the subject is creating the object, or creating the meaning of the object as an individual achievement in a particular situation is a misrepresentation of what is actually taking place. Within the 'Natural Attitude of Everyday Life', the subject's role in the constitution of meaningful objects is better understood as a reading off, or interpretation, of the meaning from the object-as-intended. This reading off, or interpretation, of the object's meaning is an intersubjective achievement of the intending subject that takes place within the intersubjective realm of the natural attitude.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ https://philpapers.org/archive/SCHCPT-2.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ Menon, Sangeetha; Anindya Sinha; B.V. Sreekantan (2014). Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Consciousness and the Self. New Youk, Dordrecht, London: Springer. p. 172. ISBN 978-81-322-1586-8. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
  3. ^ Novak, Mark (2012). Issues in Aging (3rd ed.). Pearson. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-205-83195-1.
  4. ^ Schütz, Alfred (1967). Phenomenology of the Social World. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 978-0-8101-0390-0.
  5. ^ Barber, Michael D. (2004). The Participating Citizen: A Biography of Alfred Schutz. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-6141-9.
  6. ^ Weber, Max (1978) [1968]. Economy and society: An outline of interpretive sociology. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 4. ISBN 0-520-03500-3.
  7. ^ Weber, Max (1978) [1968]. Economy and society: An outline of interpretive sociology. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 4. ISBN 0-520-03500-3.
  8. ^ Schütz, Alfred, and Thomas Luckmann. 1980 [1973]. "Structures of the Life-World" 1, translated by R. M. Zaner and J. T. Engelhardt Jr. Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 978-0-8101-0622-2.
  9. ^ Natanson, Maurice Alexander (1974). Edmund Husserl: Philosopher of Infinite Tasks. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 978-0-8101-0456-3.
  10. ^ Sokolowski, Robert (2000). Introduction to Phenomenology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-66792-0.
  11. ^ a b Husserl, Edmund (1989). The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology: An Introduction to Phenomenological Philosophy. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 978-0-8101-0458-7.
  12. ^ https://philpapers.org/archive/SCHCPT-2.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  13. ^ Gurwitsch, Aron (1964). The Field of Consciousness. Duquesne Univ Pr. ISBN 978-0-8207-0043-4.
  14. ^ Luft, Sebastian (2002), Husserl's Notion of the Natural Attitude and the Shift to Transcendental Phenomenology, Springer https://epublications.marquette.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=phil_fac
  15. ^ a b Schutz, Alfred. 1962. The Problem of Social Reality: Collected Papers I. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. [note: this citation is only an assumption, as the original author only provided the information "(Schutz 1962)" without further elaboration.]
  16. ^ Atkinson, Will (March 2010). "Phenomenological Additions to the Bourdieusian Toolbox: Two Problems for Bourdieu, Two Solutions from Schutz". Sociological Theory. 28 (1): 1–19. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9558.2009.01362.x. ISSN 0735-2751. S2CID 144674981.
  17. ^ a b Elster, Julius (2017-09-02). "The temporal dimension of reflexivity: linking reflexive orientations to the stock of knowledge". Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory. 18 (3): 274–293. doi:10.1080/1600910x.2017.1397527. ISSN 1600-910X. S2CID 149379807.
  18. ^ Husserl, Edmund. (2013). Cartesian Meditations : an Introduction to Phenomenology. Springer Netherlands. ISBN 978-94-017-4952-7. OCLC 1066195140.
  19. ^ Schutz, Alfred, 1899-1959. (1989). The structures of the life-world. Northwestern University Press. ISBN 0-8101-0832-1. OCLC 884494825.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ Turner, Jonathan H. (1988). A theory of social interaction. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-1463-0. OCLC 17106127.
  21. ^ Schutz, Alfred (1972). "Collected Papers I". Phaenomenologica. 11. doi:10.1007/978-94-010-2851-6. ISBN 978-90-247-3046-9. ISSN 0079-1350.
  22. ^ Heidegger, Martin. 1992 [1962]. Being and Time, translated by J. Macquarrie & E. Robinson, from Sein und Zeit (7th ed.). Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. Available in full via PDF-Objects.

Bibliography edit

Barber, Michael D. "Alfred Schutz," Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Web. — Touches on the phenomenological sociology.
Natanson, Maurice, and Edmund Husserl. 1974. Philosopher of Infinite Tasks. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. Paperback. — Provides sociologists with an introduction to phenomenology.
Schutz, Alfred. 1967. The Phenomenology of the Social World. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. Paperback. — Touches on the phenomenological method.
Smith, Davis Woodruff. "Phenomenology," Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Web. — Provides an introduction to phenomenology.
Sokolowski, Robert. 2000. Introduction to Phenomenology. New York: Cambridge University Press. Paperback. — Touches on the phenomenological method.
Wender, Jonathan. 2001. “Phenomenology, Cultural Criminology and the Return to Astonishment.” Pp. 49–60 in Cultural Criminology Unleashed, edited by J. Ferrell, K. Hayward, W. Morrison, and M. Presdee. London: Routledge.
Zaner, R. M. 2010. "Editorial Introduction." Pp. xv–xxxv in The Collected Works of Aron Gurwitsch, V.III. New York: Springer. — Touches on the phenomenological method.

phenomenology, sociology, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, articles, suggestions, december, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, message, phenomenology, within, sociology, phenomenological. This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Phenomenology within sociology or phenomenological sociology examines the concept of social reality German Lebenswelt or Lifeworld as a product of intersubjectivity Phenomenology analyses social reality in order to explain the formation and nature of social institutions 1 The application of phenomenological ideas in sociology differs from other social science applications of social science applications Contents 1 Context 2 Core assumptions 2 1 Stock of knowledge 3 Reduction 4 See also 5 References 6 BibliographyContext editHaving developed the initial groundwork for philosophical phenomenology Edmund Husserl set out to create a method for understanding the properties and structures of consciousness such as emotions perceptions of meaning and aesthetic judgement 2 Social phenomenologists talk about the social construction of reality They view social order as a creation of everyday interaction often looking at conversations to find the methods that people use to maintain social relations 3 The leading exponent of Phenomenological Sociology was Alfred Schutz 1899 1959 Schutz sought to provide a critical philosophical foundation for Max Weber s interpretive sociology verstehende Soziologie by applying methods and insights derived from the philosophy of Husserl to the study of the social world 4 5 It is the building of this bridge between Husserlian phenomenology and Weberian sociology that serves as the starting point for contemporary phenomenological sociology Not all versions of phenomenological sociology are based on Weberian themes There is some historical evidence that suggests elements of Weberian sociology are themselves based on certain phenomenological themes especially in regard to the theory of the intended meaning of an act and ideas regarding theory and concept formation 6 Weber may have taken influence from Wilhelm Dilthey s theory of Weltanschauung who may have also taken from Husserl s theory of meaning 7 While Husserl s work was intended to understand how we reflect on the structures of consciousness in its own right Schutz was concerned with the relationship between the Lebenswelt Lifeworld and human action 8 Husserl s work was conducted as a transcendental phenomenology of consciousness Schutz s work was conducted as a mundane phenomenology of the social world 9 Their projects differ in level of analysis topics of study and the type of phenomenological reduction used in analysis Ultimately these two distinct projects should be seen as complementary with the studies of the latter dependent on the studies of the former That is valid phenomenological descriptions of the social reality should be consistent with the descriptions of intentional consciousness It is from Husserl s work that Schutz derives its meaning and verifiability 10 This is in keeping with Husserl s conception of phenomenology as First Philosophy the foundation or ground for both philosophy and all of the sciences 11 Core assumptions editPhenomenology takes it that social reality does not take place empirically or in any objective sense Its various manifestations such as institutions organizations social classes and so on are thought to be caused by lived social reality 12 In this way these manifestations of social reality are considered objects constituted in and for consciousness 13 The process by which these manifestations come into being as products of consciousness is referred to in sociology as typification In Husserl s Ideas I he defines a concept he calls the general thesis Natural Attitude as state of affairs in which we live before we have engaged in philosophy or as the assumption that the world is as we literally perceive it in consciousness 14 The general thesis of the Natural Attitude is the ideational foundation for our everyday social experience It unites the world of individual objects into a unified world of meaning which we assume is shared by any and all who share our culture 15 The Natural Attitude forms the underpinning for our thoughts and actions It is the mental projection of a belief that a naturally occurring social world is both factually objective in its existential status and unquestioned in its natural appearance According to the Natural Attitude social objects persons language institutions etc have the same existential status as objects occurring in nature rocks trees and animals etc Although it is often referred to as the General Thesis of the Natural Attitude it is not a thesis in the formal sense of the term but a non thematic assumption or belief that underlies our sense of the objectivity and facticity of the world and the objects appearing in this world The facticity of this world of common sense is both unquestioned and virtually unquestionable it is sanctionable as to its status as that which is and that which everyone or at least any reasonable person agrees to be the case with regard to the factual character of the world As far as traditional social science is concerned this taken for granted world of social facts is the starting and end point for any and all investigations of the social world It provides the raw observable taken for granted data upon which the findings of the social sciences are idealized conceptualized and offered up for analysis and discourse Within traditional social science this data is formulated into a second order world of abstractions and idealizations constituted in accordance with these sciences modelling schemes 11 Schutz s phenomenological descriptions are made from within the Phenomenological Attitude which follows the process of phenomenological reduction epoche which suspends the Natural Attitude and reveals the phenomena occurring within the Natural Attitude of the mind as manifestations of the non objective mental world Stock of knowledge edit The term stock of knowledge was coined by Schutz 16 17 15 This concept is vital to phenomenological sociologists and their claim that social reality is intersubjective While phenomenologists tend to focus on establishing the structures of intentional consciousness as Husserl calls it 18 proponents of phenomenological sociology are interested in the structures of the lifeworld 19 The latter refers to the world as directly experienced through the subjectivity of everyday life As we go through our everyday lives we draw on our stocks of knowledge to make interpretations The stock of knowledge is typically a deep background configuration 20 of a series of past experiences comprising one s native language and linguistic rules conventional modes of interpreting expressions and events numerous theories and methods aural and visual forms shared cultural and normative understandings and the like 17 Schutz argued that all interpretation of this world is based upon a stock of previous experiences of it 21 Reduction editMartin Heidegger characterizes Husserl s phenomenological research project as the analytic description of intentionality in its a priori 22 as it is the phenomenon of intentionality which provides the mode of access for conducting any and all phenomenological investigations and the ultimate ground or foundation guaranteeing any findings resulting from any such inquiry In recognizing consciousness as having the formal structure of intentionality as always having consciousness of an intended object Husserlian phenomenology has located the access point to a radical new form of scientific description Methodologically access to this field is obtained through the phenomenological reduction While there is some controversy as to the official name number and levels of the reduction this internal argument among the philosophers need not concern us For the purposes of a mundane phenomenology of the social world we as phenomenological social scientists engage in a mundane phenomenological reduction called the Epoche The hallmark of this form of the reduction is what it reveals about its field of inquiry a mundane phenomenology of the social world defines its phenomenal field as the intersubjective region of mundane consciousness as appearing from within the natural attitude The phenomenological reduction as applied to a mundane analysis of the social world consists of the bracketing equivalents methodical disregard putting out of play suspension of the thesis of the natural attitude This bracketing is nothing more than a bracketing of the existential belief in the existence of the objective world the existential status of the world itself is not called into question The result of this bracketing is that our attention is shifted from the objects in the world as they occur in nature to the objects in the world as they appear for consciousness as phenomenon for intentional consciousness Our descriptions of objects in the world are now transformed from the naive descriptions of objects as occurring in nature to phenomenological descriptions of objects as appearing for consciousness In short for the purpose of a mundane phenomenological analysis within the natural attitude the epoche transforms objects as occurring in nature into objects for subjectivity objects for consciousness objects as intended Keep in mind that for positivism the meaning of an object is by definition objective That is the meaning of the object is a property of the object itself is independent of any particular observer and the same for any and all observers regardless of their orientation or perspective For phenomenology an object is always intended and constituted as meaningful by a particular intending subject from a particular orientation and from a particular perspectival viewing point In addition phenomenologically speaking the meaning of the object cannot be separated from its phenomenality or materiality and cannot be constituted qua meaningful object without the meaning bestowing act of intending on the part of a constituting subject For a phenomenology undertaken within the natural attitude meaning does not inherently accrue to an object as a thing in itself is not an add on to the object a label and is not separable from the object as constituted by the intending subject in the act of meaning constitution For phenomenology the meaning and the object in its materiality are co constituted in the intending of the object by the subject phenomenologically speaking there are only meaningful objects There is no such thing as a neutrally valued object or a meaningless object and the notion of an object as nonsense is itself a meaningful determination as the existentialists would say we are condemned to meaning Note that because we as observers have already been born into an already existing social world that is already pre interpreted through both social meanings and through architectural and business intentionality and made meaningful to us as an intersubjectively available entity any proposal that the subject is creating the object or creating the meaning of the object as an individual achievement in a particular situation is a misrepresentation of what is actually taking place Within the Natural Attitude of Everyday Life the subject s role in the constitution of meaningful objects is better understood as a reading off or interpretation of the meaning from the object as intended This reading off or interpretation of the object s meaning is an intersubjective achievement of the intending subject that takes place within the intersubjective realm of the natural attitude See also editBracketing phenomenology Conversation analysis Ethnomethodology Hermeneutics NoemaReferences edit https philpapers org archive SCHCPT 2 pdf bare URL PDF Menon Sangeetha Anindya Sinha B V Sreekantan 2014 Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Consciousness and the Self New Youk Dordrecht London Springer p 172 ISBN 978 81 322 1586 8 Retrieved 17 December 2015 Novak Mark 2012 Issues in Aging 3rd ed Pearson p 30 ISBN 978 0 205 83195 1 Schutz Alfred 1967 Phenomenology of the Social World Evanston IL Northwestern University Press ISBN 978 0 8101 0390 0 Barber Michael D 2004 The Participating Citizen A Biography of Alfred Schutz Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 6141 9 Weber Max 1978 1968 Economy and society An outline of interpretive sociology Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 4 ISBN 0 520 03500 3 Weber Max 1978 1968 Economy and society An outline of interpretive sociology Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 4 ISBN 0 520 03500 3 Schutz Alfred and Thomas Luckmann 1980 1973 Structures of the Life World 1 translated by R M Zaner and J T Engelhardt Jr Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Evanston IL Northwestern University Press ISBN 978 0 8101 0622 2 Natanson Maurice Alexander 1974 Edmund Husserl Philosopher of Infinite Tasks Evanston IL Northwestern University Press ISBN 978 0 8101 0456 3 Sokolowski Robert 2000 Introduction to Phenomenology Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66792 0 a b Husserl Edmund 1989 The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology An Introduction to Phenomenological Philosophy Evanston IL Northwestern University Press ISBN 978 0 8101 0458 7 https philpapers org archive SCHCPT 2 pdf bare URL PDF Gurwitsch Aron 1964 The Field of Consciousness Duquesne Univ Pr ISBN 978 0 8207 0043 4 Luft Sebastian 2002 Husserl s Notion of the Natural Attitude and the Shift to Transcendental Phenomenology Springer https epublications marquette edu cgi viewcontent cgi article 1018 amp context phil fac a b Schutz Alfred 1962 The Problem of Social Reality Collected Papers I The Hague Martinus Nijhoff note this citation is only an assumption as the original author only provided the information Schutz 1962 without further elaboration Atkinson Will March 2010 Phenomenological Additions to the Bourdieusian Toolbox Two Problems for Bourdieu Two Solutions from Schutz Sociological Theory 28 1 1 19 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9558 2009 01362 x ISSN 0735 2751 S2CID 144674981 a b Elster Julius 2017 09 02 The temporal dimension of reflexivity linking reflexive orientations to the stock of knowledge Distinktion Journal of Social Theory 18 3 274 293 doi 10 1080 1600910x 2017 1397527 ISSN 1600 910X S2CID 149379807 Husserl Edmund 2013 Cartesian Meditations an Introduction to Phenomenology Springer Netherlands ISBN 978 94 017 4952 7 OCLC 1066195140 Schutz Alfred 1899 1959 1989 The structures of the life world Northwestern University Press ISBN 0 8101 0832 1 OCLC 884494825 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Turner Jonathan H 1988 A theory of social interaction Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 1463 0 OCLC 17106127 Schutz Alfred 1972 Collected Papers I Phaenomenologica 11 doi 10 1007 978 94 010 2851 6 ISBN 978 90 247 3046 9 ISSN 0079 1350 Heidegger Martin 1992 1962 Being and Time translated by J Macquarrie amp E Robinson from Sein und Zeit 7th ed Oxford Blackwell Publishers Available in full via PDF Objects Bibliography editBarber Michael D Alfred Schutz Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Web Touches on the phenomenological sociology Natanson Maurice and Edmund Husserl 1974 Philosopher of Infinite Tasks Evanston IL Northwestern University Press Paperback Provides sociologists with an introduction to phenomenology Schutz Alfred 1967 The Phenomenology of the Social World Evanston IL Northwestern University Press Paperback Touches on the phenomenological method Smith Davis Woodruff Phenomenology Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Web Provides an introduction to phenomenology Sokolowski Robert 2000 Introduction to Phenomenology New York Cambridge University Press Paperback Touches on the phenomenological method Wender Jonathan 2001 Phenomenology Cultural Criminology and the Return to Astonishment Pp 49 60 in Cultural Criminology Unleashed edited by J Ferrell K Hayward W Morrison and M Presdee London Routledge Zaner R M 2010 Editorial Introduction Pp xv xxxv in The Collected Works of Aron Gurwitsch V III New York Springer Touches on the phenomenological method Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phenomenology sociology amp oldid 1214942529, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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