Phenomenology

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Phenomenology

  • clinical phenomenology
  • hermeneutic phenomenology


  • Selected Abstracts


    LÉVINAS AND THE THREE DIMENSIONS OF SURPASSING PHENOMENOLOGY

    JOURNAL OF CHINESE PHILOSOPHY, Issue 2008
    Dachun Yang
    [source]


    PHENOMENOLOGY, THEOLOGY AND PSYCHOSIS: TOWARDS COMPASSION

    THE HEYTHROP JOURNAL, Issue 4 2007
    GLENN MORRISON
    First page of article [source]


    JEAN-YVES LACOSTE: A PHENOMENOLOGY OF LITURGY*

    THE HEYTHROP JOURNAL, Issue 3 2005
    Joeri SchrijversArticle first published online: 15 JUN 200
    First page of article [source]


    PHENOMENOLOGY AND INTERPRETATION BEYOND THE FLESH

    ART HISTORY, Issue 4 2009
    AMANDA BOETZKES
    This article explores the ethical questions surrounding the phenomenological approach to interpretation in art history. It addresses contemporary art, from postminimalist sculpture to installation. Although the risk of phenomenology is that it merely confirms and reproduces the viewer's perceptual expectations, in fact, on a deeper level, the notion of the ontological intertwining of the viewer and the artwork demands a receptive stance in the face of art. Through an investigation of the notions of embodiment, intentionality, and mode of confrontation, I suggest that phenomenology not only mediates a trenchant understanding of the perceptual experience of the artwork, it is predicated on an acknowledgement of the artwork's alterity from interpretation. In this way, it invites a consideration of the linguistic malleability implicit in the fleshly chiasm that binds the viewer to the artwork. [source]


    Little evidence for different phenomenology in poststroke depression

    ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 6 2010
    T. B. Cumming
    Cumming TB, Churilov L, Skoog I, Blomstrand C, Linden T. Little evidence for different phenomenology in poststroke depression. Objective:, It remains unclear whether mood depressive disorders after stroke have a distinct phenomenology. We evaluated the symptom profile of poststroke depression (PSD) and assessed whether somatic symptoms were reported disproportionately by stroke patients. Method:, The sample was 149 stroke patients at 18 months poststroke and 745 age- and sex-matched general population controls. A comprehensive psychiatric interview was undertaken and depression was diagnosed according to DSM-III-R criteria. Results:, Depressed controls reported more ,inability to feel' (P = 0.002) and ,disturbed sleep' (P = 0.008) than depressed stroke patients. Factor analysis of the 10 depressive symptoms identified two main factors, which appeared to represent somatic and psychological symptoms. There was no difference in scores on these two factors between stroke patients and controls. Conclusion:, Phenomenology of depression at 18 months poststroke is broadly similar but not the same as that described by controls. Somatic symptoms of depression were not over-reported by stroke patients. [source]


    Phenomenology and Education: An introduction

    EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY, Issue 1 2009
    Gloria Dall'Alba
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Clinical Presentations and Phenomenology of Myoclonus

    EPILEPSIA, Issue 2003
    Edward Faught
    Summary: The term "myoclonus" has been used to describe heterogeneous phenomena involving sudden movements, but there is no generally accepted, precise definition of myoclonus. Myoclonus can often be classified based on electroencephalographic (EEG) and/or electromyographic (EMG) data. Some myoclonic epilepsy syndromes, including juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, may frequently be misdiagnosed because of failure to obtain a complete patient history and/or failure to appreciate characteristic EEG changes. A good understanding of the features associated with myoclonic disorders (particularly the myoclonic epilepsies) and of features associated with other neurologic disorders that are often confused with myoclonic disorders is an invaluable aid in obtaining an accurate diagnosis and will ultimately help in determining the best course of treatment for patients. [source]


    Water Deprivation Headache: "New" Variants of Phenomenology

    HEADACHE, Issue 10 2004
    Vinod Kumar Gupta MD
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Closer: Performance, Technologies, Phenomenology.

    HYPATIA, Issue 3 2010
    By SUSAN KOZEL
    First page of article [source]


    Toward a Phenomenology of Sex-Right: Reviving Radical Feminist Theory of Compulsory Heterosexuality

    HYPATIA, Issue 1 2007
    KATHY MIRIAMArticle first published online: 9 JAN 200
    In this essay, Miriam argues for a phenomenological-hermeneutic approach to the radical feminist theory of sex-right and compulsory heterosexuality. Against critics of radical feminism, she argues that when understood from a phenomenological' hermeneutic perspective, such theory does not foreclose female sexual agency. On the contrary, men's right of sexual access to women and girls is part of our background understanding of heteronormativity, and thus integral to the lived experience of female sexual agency. [source]


    The End of Phenomenology: Bergson's Interval in Irigaray

    HYPATIA, Issue 3 2000
    DOROTHEA E. OLKOWSKI
    Luce Irigaray is often cited as the principle feminist who adheres to phenomenology as a method of descriptive philosophy. A different approach to Irigaray might well open the way to not only an avoidance of phenomenology's sexist tendencies, but the recognition that the breach between Irigaray's ideas and those of phenomenology is complete. I argue that this occurs and that Irigaray's work directly implicates a Bergsonian critique of the limits of phenomenology. [source]


    Epistemological and theoretical challenges for studying power and politics in information systems

    INFORMATION SYSTEMS JOURNAL, Issue 2 2007
    Leiser Silva
    Abstract., The study of the role of power in managing information systems (IS) still offers a major epistemological challenge to researchers in the field. Although significant work has been done, there is yet to emerge a research approach that permits a penetrating study of the phenomenon of power by virtue of adopting a Machiavellian stance. This paper proposes such an approach in the form of an interpretivist position combined with a theoretical framework whose origin lies in political science and the sociology of technology. In developing its philosophical argument, the paper compares three meta-theories that have been applied to study IS: Phenomenology, Critical Theory and Structuration Theory. All three are compared in terms of their epistemological position regarding the relationship between power and IS. We argue that, although enlightening, those meta-theories fail to unravel the hidden and strategic nature of power. The paper concludes by proposing a particular theoretical formulation that, rather than censoring power and politics, will provide the epistemological means for unravelling them. [source]


    Toward a Critical Phenomenology of "Illegality": State Power, Criminalization, and Abjectivity among Undocumented Migrant Workers in Tel Aviv, Israel

    INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION, Issue 3 2007
    Sarah S. Willen
    ABSTRACT Given the vast scope and magnitude of the phenomenon of so-called "illegal" migration in the present historical moment, this article contends that phenomenologically engaged ethnography has a crucial role to play in sensitizing not only anthropologists, but also policymakers, politicians, and broader publics to the complicated, often anxiety-ridden and frightening realities associated with "the condition of migrant illegality," both of specific host society settings and comparatively across the globe. In theoretical terms, the article constitutes a preliminary attempt to link pressing questions in the fields of legal anthropology and anthropology of transnational migration, on one hand, with recent work by phenomenologically oriented scholars interested in the anthropology of experience, on the other. The article calls upon ethnographers of undocumented transnational migration to bridge these areas of scholarship by applying what can helpfully be characterized as a "critical phenomenological" approach to the study of migrant "illegality" (Willen, 2006; see also Desjarlais, 2003). This critical phenomenological approach involves a three-dimensional model of illegality: first, as a form of juridical status; second, as a sociopolitical condition; and third, as a mode of being-in-the-world. In developing this model, the article draws upon 26 non-consecutive months of ethnographic field research conducted within the communities of undocumented West African (Nigerian and Ghanaian) and Filipino migrants in Tel Aviv, Israel, between 2000 and 2004. During the first part of this period, "illegal" migrants in Israel were generally treated as benign, excluded "Others." Beginning in mid-2002, however, a resource-intensive, government-sponsored campaign of mass arrest and deportation reconfigured the condition of migrant "illegality" in Israel and, in effect, transformed these benign "Others" into wanted criminals. By analyzing this transformation the article highlights the profound significance of examining not only the judicial and sociopolitical dimensions of what it means to be "illegal" but also its impact on migrants' modes of being-in-the-world. [source]


    Phenomenology and psychological assessment of complex posttraumatic states

    JOURNAL OF TRAUMATIC STRESS, Issue 5 2005
    John Briere
    The authors offer a framework for the assessment of psychological responses associated with exposure to early onset, multiple, or extended traumatic stressors. Six prominent and overlapping symptoms clusters are described: altered self-capacities, cognitive symptoms, mood disturbance, overdeveloped avoidance responses, somatoform distress, and posttraumatic stress. A strategy for the structured, psychometrically valid assessment of these outcomes is introduced, and specific recommendations for use of various generic and trauma-specific child and adult measures are provided. Implications of trauma assessment for treatment planning are discussed. [source]


    Meaning, Truth, and Phenomenology

    METAPHILOSOPHY, Issue 4 2000
    Mark Bevir
    This essay approaches Derrida through a consideration of his writings on Saussure and Husserl. Derrida is right to insist, following Saussure, on a relational theory of meaning: words do not have a one-to-one correspondence with their referents. But he is wrong to insist on a purely differential theory of meaning: words can refer to reality within the context of a body of knowledge. Similarly, Derrida is right to reject Husserl's idea of presence: no truths are simply given to consciousness. But he is wrong to reject the very idea of objective knowledge: we can defend a notion of objective knowledge couched in terms of a comparison of rival bodies of theories. The essay concludes by considering the implications of the preceding arguments for the enterprise of phenomenology. [source]


    Shock waves,Phenomenology, experimental, and numerical simulation

    METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, Issue 9-10 2005
    Klaus Thoma
    First, the principal phenomena of shock wave generation and propagation, predominantly in solid media, are presented, and then analytical and numerical mathematical treatment of shock wave processes on the basis of mass, momentum, and energy conservation laws will be described and discussed. Experimental methods of shock wave investigations by means of impact and explosive techniques are summarized, including hypervelocity acceleration facilities and high-pressure explosive devices. Shock pressure barometry by means of mineralogical evidence of distinct material phase transitions and characteristic shock structures is also discussed. [source]


    Comment/correction: "Waves in 2D anisotropic L-C lattice metamaterials: Phenomenology and properties"

    MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 10 2008
    B. Glass
    Abstract In Brennan et al. (Microwave Opt Technol Lett 48 (2006), 2538,2542), in part 2, (for Y0 = 0) the unusual properties of an infinite bidimensional L-C lattice obtaining results concerning the propagation of waves (backward and forward propagation) were discussed. The same result was obtained in Brennan et al. (Microwave Symp Dig 2005 IEEE MTT-S Int 12,17 (2005), 1757,1760) (part II). This comment points out a more efficient performance analysis and shows that the behavior for backward (LHM) or forward (RHM) waves has no special restriction for values of the phase like ,i < ,/2(i = 1,2). Moreover, it must be carefully treated that the symmetry of the phase diagram (isofrequency) for the first zone of Brillouin (,i = [,,,,], with lattice periodicity 2,). Also, there is an unusual feature for the angle ,(,1)X=const between the group and phase velocities for backward waves, where there is a discontinuity for isofrequency X = 1 at ,1 = ,. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Microwave Opt Technol Lett 50: 2730,2732, 2008; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/mop.23732 [source]


    Levodopa-related motor complications,Phenomenology,

    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, Issue S3 2008
    Susan H. Fox MRCP (UK)
    Abstract Long term levodopa therapy in Parkinson's disease (PD) results in a range of problems. These include fluctuations in FD symptoms termed motor fluctuations, as well as non-motor symptoms, termed non-motor fluctuations. Here we review the phenomenology and methods of assessing these levodopa-related complications. © 2008 Movement Disorder Society [source]


    Space, the Body, and the Text in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell

    ORBIS LITERARUM, Issue 4 2003
    Eynel Wardi
    This paper addresses the interrelations of space, the body, and textuality in Blake's poetics of expansion in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. It ponders the experience of the embodied imagination as it figures, and is configured, in the unfolding of the textual spaces of the Marriage by their implied author and his readers alike. Blake's poetics of expansion is discussed in view of the models of textuality and the phenomenology of imagination projected by the Marriage, and with reference to concepts drawn from Merleau-Ponty's Phenomenology of Perception. [source]


    God in Recent French Phenomenology

    PHILOSOPHY COMPASS (ELECTRONIC), Issue 5 2008
    J. Aaron Simmons
    In this essay, I provide an introduction to the so-called ,theological turn' in recent French, ,new' phenomenology. I begin by articulating the stakes of excluding God from phenomenology (as advocated by Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger) and then move on to a brief consideration of why Dominique Janicaud contends that, by inquiring into the ,inapparent', new phenomenology is no longer phenomenological. I then consider the general trajectories of this recent movement and argue that there are five main themes that unite the work of such varied thinkers as Levinas, Derrida, Marion, Henry, Chrétien, Lacoste, and Ric,ur. I conclude by outlining points of overlap between new phenomenology and contemporary analytic philosophy of religion and suggest that the two stand as important resources for each other. [source]


    Phenomenology of magnetic second harmonic generation from low symmetry surfaces and interfaces

    PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (C) - CURRENT TOPICS IN SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 8 2003
    L. Carroll
    Abstract Low dimensional magnetic structures show interesting and novel phenomena such as oscillatory magnetic coupling and giant magnetoresistance. Magnetic second harmonic generation (MSHG) can provide unique information on magnetic surfaces and interfaces because, within the dipole approximation, broken space-inversion symmetry at the surface or interface of centrosymmetric media, and broken time-reversal symmetry arising from the magnetization, are both required in order to observe a magnetic-field-dependent second harmonic response. However, the additional reduction in symmetry arising from the magetization produces many non-zero susceptibility tensor components, particularly in the case of vicinal, stepped surfaces of 1m symmetry, and care is needed in designing experiments that will produce readily interpretable results. Phenomenological expressions for the MSHG response from systems of 1m symmetry are presented, where combinations of input and output polarizations and magnetic field orientations allow the essential physics of these systems to be explored, particularly in relation to distinguishing terrace and step contributions to the magnetization from vicinal surfaces and interfaces. (© 2003 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    A Study of the Temporal Course of Phenomenology of Alcohol Dependence

    THE AMERICAN JOURNAL ON ADDICTIONS, Issue 3 2005
    Satindra Kumar M.B.B.S.
    The natural history of alcoholism was first charted out in 1946 by Jellinek, whose original results have been replicated by multiple research groups. They have verified a general progression ofalcohol dependence through a series of identifiable phases. The study investigated the sequence of events in the course of alcohol dependence and its deviations from randomness. The study consisted of 36 patients with alcohol dependence, subjected to a structured questionnaire containing 34 items describing the phenomenology of alcohol dependence, based on the lines of SCID. The items experienced by each patient were identified and then plotted on a timeline graph according to an important life event, the items being represented on cards given to the patients randomly. The subjects were reinterviewed after one week and asked to rank their symptoms again to analyze test-retest reliability. The analysis ofthe item ordering was determined by null hypothesis of randomness. The ordering showed three phases. The early phase was characterized by features of increased tolerance loss of flexibility, and salience. The middle phase consisted mainly of the need for alcohol, and the late phase was predominated by features of physiological withdrawal, tremors, nausea, panics, and hallucinations. There is a characteristic ordering of new events and symptoms, which suggests a developmental process of alcoholism, but this is apparent only if attention is confined to a limited part ofthe broad spectrum. This process is obscured by consideration ofthe social concomitants of alcohol dependence. The study ofthe natural history of alcohol dependence is essential in recognizing and treating the problem and determining whether an intervention appears to be working. [source]


    Towards a Fuller Human Identity: a Phenomenology of Family Life, Social Harmony, and the Recovery of the Black Self.

    THE HEYTHROP JOURNAL, Issue 3 2008
    By Pius Ojara
    First page of article [source]


    ,Tarrying with the Negative': Bataille and Derrida's Reading of Negation in Hegel's Phenomenology

    THE HEYTHROP JOURNAL, Issue 3 2002
    Raphael Foshay
    Central to Bataille's critique of Hegel is his reading in ,Hegel, Death, and Sacrifice' of ,negation' and of ,lordship and bondage' in the Phenomenology of Spirit. Whereas Hegel invokes negation as inclusive of death, Bataille points out (following his teacher Kojeve) that negation in the dynamic of lordship and bondage must of necessity be representational rather than actual. Derrida, in ,From Restricted to General Economy' sees in Bataille's perspective an undercutting of the overall Hegelian project consonant with his own ongoing deconstruction of Hegelian sublation. I argue that not only does Hegel fail to adequately pursue his own best advice to ,tarry with the negative,' but Bataille and Derrida's critique misconstrues the relation between sublation and dialectic in Hegel's work. I explicate Adorno's ,negative dialectic' by way of alternative both to Hegelian speculative dialectic and to its Bataillean,Derridean deconstruction. [source]


    The Things Themselves: Phenomenology and the Return to the Everyday by H. Peter Steeves

    THE JOURNAL OF AMERICAN CULTURE, Issue 1 2007
    John Shelton Lawrence
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Ego Boundaries, Shamanic-Like Techniques, and Subjective Experience: An Experimental Study

    ANTHROPOLOGY OF CONSCIOUSNESS, Issue 1 2008
    ADAM J. ROCK
    ABSTRACT The subjective effects and therapeutic potential of the shamanic practice of journeying is well known. However, previous research has neglected to provide a comprehensive assessment of the subjective effects of shamanic-like journeying techniques on non-shamans. Shamanic-like techniques are those that demonstrate some similarity to shamanic practices and yet deviate from what may genuinely be considered shamanism. Furthermore, the personality traits that influence individual susceptibility to shamanic-like techniques are unclear. The aim of the present study was, thus, to investigate experimentally the effect of shamanic-like techniques and a personality trait referred to as "ego boundaries" on subjective experience including mood disturbance. Forty-three non-shamans were administered a composite questionnaire consisting of demographic items and a measure of ego boundaries (i.e., the Short Boundary Questionnaire; BQ-Sh). Participants were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: listening to monotonous drumming for 15 minutes coupled with one of two sets of journeying instructions; or sitting quietly with eyes closed for 15 minutes. Participants' subjective experience and mood disturbance were retrospectively assessed using the Phenomenology of Consciousness Inventory (PCI) and the Profile of Mood States-Short Form, respectively. The results indicated that there was a statistically significant difference between conditions with regard to the PCI major dimensions of visual imagery, attention and rationality, and minor dimensions of imagery amount and absorption. However, the shamanic-like conditions were not associated with a major reorganization of the pattern of subjective experience compared to the sitting quietly condition, suggesting that what is typically referred to as an altered state of consciousness effect was not evident. One shamanic-like condition and the BQ-Sh subscales need for order, childlikeness, and sensitivity were statistically significant predictors of total mood disturbance. Implications of the findings for the anthropology of consciousness are also considered. [source]


    Psychotic phenomena in 257 young children and adolescents with bipolar I disorder: delusions and hallucinations (benign and pathological)

    BIPOLAR DISORDERS, Issue 1 2008
    Rebecca Tillman
    Objectives:, In contrast to studies of adult bipolar I disorder (BP-I), there is a paucity of data on psychotic phenomena in child BP-I. Therefore, the aim of this work was to describe delusions and hallucinations in pediatric BP-I. Methods:, Subjects were 257 participants, aged 6,16, in either of two large, ongoing, NIMH-funded studies, ,Phenomenology and Course of Pediatric Bipolar Disorders' or ,Treatment of Early Age Mania (TEAM)'. All subjects had current DSM-IV BP-I (manic or mixed phase) with a Children's Global Assessment Scale score ,60 (definite clinical impairment), and all had cardinal mania symptoms (i.e., elation and/or grandiosity). Comprehensive assessments included the Washington University in St. Louis Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (WASH-U-KSADS), which was administered to parents about their children and separately to children about themselves by experienced research clinicians. The WASH-U-KSADS contains modules for developmentally child-age-specific manifestations of numerous categories of psychotic phenomena. Results:, Psychosis was present in 76.3% (n = 196) of subjects, which included 38.9% (n = 100) with delusions, 5.1% (n = 13) with pathological hallucinations, and 32.3% (n = 83) with both. The most common delusion was grandiose (67.7%, n = 174), and the most common pathological hallucination was visual (16.0%, n = 41). Benign hallucinations occurred in 43.6% (n = 112). A median split by age yielded 6,9 year-olds (n = 139) and 10,16 year-olds (n = 118). Analyses of these two groups, and of 6, 7, 8, and 9 year-olds separately, found no significant differences in psychotic phenomena. Conclusions:, Counterintuitively, psychosis was equally prevalent in 6,9 compared to 10,16 year-olds. High prevalence of psychosis in child BP-I warrants focus in intervention strategies and is consistent with increasing evidence of the severity of child-versus adult-onset BP-I. [source]


    A prepubertal and early adolescent bipolar disorder-I phenotype: review of phenomenology and longitudinal course

    BIPOLAR DISORDERS, Issue 4 2003
    James L Craney
    Objective: Phenomenology, assessment, longitudinal, and psychosocial findings from an ongoing, controlled, prospective study of 93 subjects with a prepubertal and early adolescent bipolar disorder phenotype (PEA-BP) will be reviewed. Methods: Unlike adult-onset bipolar disorder, for which there were over 50 years of systematic investigations, there were a paucity of rigorous data and much controversy and skepticism about the existence and characteristics of prepubertal-onset mania. With this background, issues to address for investigation of child-onset mania included the following: (i) What to do about the differentiation of mania from attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). (ii) How to deal with the ubiquity of irritability as a presenting symptom in multiple child psychiatry disorders. (iii) Development of a research instrument to assess prepubertal manifestations of adult mania (i.e. children do not ,max out' credit cards or have four marriages). (iv) How to distinguish normal childhood happiness and expansiveness from pathologically impairing elated mood and grandiosity. Results: To address these issues, a PEA-BP phenotype was defined as DSM-IV mania with elated mood and/or grandiosity as one inclusion criterion. This criterion ensured that the diagnosis of mania was not made using only criteria that overlapped with those for ADHD, and that subjects had at least one of the two cardinal symptoms of mania (i.e. elated mood and grandiose behaviors). Subjects were aged 10.9 years (SD = 2.6) and age of onset of the current episode at baseline was 7.3 years (SD = 3.5). Validation of PEA-BP was shown by reliable assessment, 6-month stability, and 1- and 2-year diagnostic longitudinal outcome. PEA-BP resembled the severest form of adult-onset mania by presenting with a chronic, mixed mania, psychotic, continuously (ultradian) cycling picture. Conclusion: Counterintuitively, typical 7-year-old children with PEA-BP were more severely ill than typical 27 year olds with adult-onset mania. Moreover, longitudinal data strongly supported differentiation of PEA-BP from ADHD. [source]


    Fears and Phobias in Children: Phenomenology, Epidemiology, and Aetiology

    CHILD AND ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH, Issue 3 2002
    Thomas H. Ollendick
    We examine the phenomenology, epidemiology, and aetiology of specific phobias in this brief review. In general terms, a specific phobia exists when fear of a specific object or situation is exaggerated, cannot be reasoned away, results in avoidance of the feared object or situation, persists over time, and is not age-specific. Specific phobias occur in about 5% of children and in approximately 15% of children referred for anxiety-related problems. Most of these children are comorbid with other disorders. We suggest that specific phobias are multiply determined and over-determined. Genetic influences, temperamental predispositions, parental psychopathology, parenting practices, and individual conditioning histories converge to occasion the development and maintenance of childhood phobias. Inasmuch as any one specific phobia is acquired and maintained through such complex processes, we further conclude that treatment approaches will need to address these multiple dimensions before evidence-based treatments can be fully realised. [source]


    Husserl and Heidegger: Exploring the disparity

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING PRACTICE, Issue 1 2009
    Tracy McConnell-Henry RN BN GDN (Critical Care) MHSc (Nse Ed) PhD candidate MRCNA
    Introduced as an alternative to empirical science, phenomenology offers nursing an insightful means for understanding nursing phenomena specifically in relation to lived experiences. However, not all phenomenologies were created equal, a point which has left many a nursing researcher not only confused. Furthermore, this confusion might result in the choosing of a philosophical framework that is neither cognizant with the research question nor the epistemological lens through which the researcher operates. Drawing on common nursing examples to illustrate concepts, the authors closely examine and debate the disparities between Husserl's transcendental phenomenology and Heidegger's hermeneutic approach to phenomenology. The aim of the article is to demystify the dense language used and present the fundamental beliefs of each philosopher in a format that is accessible to novice phenomenologists. [source]