In what ways are phenomenology and solipsism alike, in what ways are they different? — baker
Phenomenologists still make decisions and have preferences in the world (politics, spirituality, jobs, family, schools) - how are these made? — Tom Storm
Phenomenology isn’t a ‘philosophy’ in terms of being a way of living life. — I like sushi
Yep, I get that - but I ask what it might contribute towards an ordinary life and decisions? How is it of use? — Tom Storm
. Phenomenologists still make decisions and have preferences in the world (politics, spirituality, jobs, family, schools) - how are these made? — Tom Storm
P & S both concern 'intentionality'.In what ways are phenomenology and solipsism alike, in what ways are they different? — baker
It is the same as asking how is science of use. That was kind of my point. — I like sushi
As a purely theoretical means of modelling conscious experience it is also useful in that the ‘lab’ is yourself. — I like sushi
Husserl was staunchly opposed to psychologism. — I like sushi
I'm not sure that means an awful lot to me. I don't really give a toss about what might be possible in reflecting upon my own conscious experience. Reflecting upon time holds almost no interest either. — Tom Storm
If you’re not interested in studying consciousness then a science of consciousness — I like sushi
P differs from S by excluding ontic commitments from its examination of intentionality (i.e. whether or not e.g. dreams, sensations, moods, images, ideas, etc refer to anything actually external to intentions). — 180 Proof
My point was I am not interested in reflecting upon my own consciousness. I can't see how this approach could lead to much more than a self-indulgent manufacturing of meaning. But I could be wrong. — Tom Storm
One isn't supposed to just "look within", but to look within in a very specific way. Many will object, of course, that in such a case, one isn't actually looking within at all. — baker
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/intentionality/Some of the leading ideas of the phenomenological tradition can be traced back to this issue. Following the lead of Edmund Husserl (1900, 1913), who was both the founder of phenomenology and a student of Brentano’s, the point of the phenomenological analysis has been to show that the essential property of intentionality of being directed onto something is not contingent upon whether some real physical target exists independently of the intentional act itself. To achieve this goal, two concepts have been central to Husserl’s internalist interpretation of intentionality: the concept of a noema (plural noemata) and the concept of epoche (i.e., bracketing) or phenomenological reduction. By the word ‘noema,’ Husserl refers to the internal structure of mental acts. The phenomenological reduction is meant to help get at the essence of mental acts by suspending all naive presuppositions about the difference between real and fictitious entities (on these complex phenomenological concepts, see the papers by Føllesdal and others conveniently gathered in Dreyfus (1982). For further discussion, see Bell (1990) and Dummett (1993).
https://iep.utm.edu/husserl/Although not the first to coin the term, it is uncontroversial to suggest that the German philosopher, Edmund Husserl (1859-1938), is the “father” of the philosophical movement known as phenomenology.
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