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      • As disciplines: phenomenology is the study of conscious experience as lived, as experienced from the first-person point of view, while philosophy of mind is the study of mind—states of belief, perception, action, etc.—focusing especially on the mind–body problem, how mental activities are related to brain activities.
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  1. Nov 16, 2003 · 1. What is Phenomenology? 2. The Discipline of Phenomenology. 3. From Phenomena to Phenomenology. 4. The History and Varieties of Phenomenology. 5. Phenomenology and Ontology, Epistemology, Logic, Ethics. 6. Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind. 7. Phenomenology in Contemporary Consciousness Theory. Bibliography. Classical Texts.

  2. Oct 6, 2005 · Philosophical work on the mind flowed in two streams through the 20th century: phenomenology and analytic philosophy. The phenomenological tradition began with Brentano and was developed by such great European philosophers as Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre, and Merleau–Ponty.

  3. As disciplines: phenomenology is the study of conscious experience as lived, as experienced from the first-person point of view, while philosophy of mind is the study of mind—states of belief, perception, action, etc.—focusing especially on the mind–body problem, how mental activities are related to brain activities.

  4. Why is there such a strict distinction between phenomenology and philosophy of mind today? From what I can tell, philosophy of mind is purely an analytical project, while phenomenology today is almost exclusively investigated by continental thinkers these days.

  5. Although it shares empiricism's (more accurately, positivism's) view that all knowledge should be grounded in experience, phenomenology holds first-person experience to be more fundamental and comprehensive than third-person observation.

  6. Oct 18, 2024 · In contrast to a rationalism that stresses conceptual reasoning at the expense of experience, phenomenology insists on the intuitive foundation and verification of concepts and especially of all a priori claims; in this sense it is a philosophy from “below,” not from “above.”

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  8. Phenomenology is to be distinguished from phenomenalism, a position in epistemology which implies that all statements about physical objects are synonymous with statements about persons having certain sensations or sense-data. George Berkeley was a phenomenalist but not a phenomenologist.

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