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Post by patricia on Dec 2, 2017 3:17:40 GMT
A phenomenological definition of a concept is not interested in gaining an objective view of the concept, but rather immerses itself in the subjective view of the participants of the concept. The phenomenological approach has a focused interest in individual's interpretations of and interactions with the concept and each other. The evaluation, therefore, is not about whether or not the concept is useful in and of itself, in a universal, cause and effect way of thinking, but rather focuses on how an individual's view of the concept, or their interaction with the concept, useful knowledge to have. What further information does the knowledge, our interrogation, of this interaction with the concept give us?
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