fenomenologien
Fenomenologien, commonly referred to as phenomenology, is a philosophical movement dedicated to examining the structures of experience and consciousness from the first-person perspective. Initiated by Edmund Husserl in the early 20th century, phenomenology seeks to describe phenomena as they appear, free of presuppositions and theoretical explanations. Central to the method are the epoché, or phenomenological bracketing, which suspends judgments about the external world; the phenomenological reduction, which aims to reveal the essential structures of experience; and the distinction between noema (the object as perceived) and noesis (the act of consciousness). Husserl also developed the concept of the Lebenswelt, the pre-theoretical life-world that forms the background of experience.
After Husserl, figures such as Martin Heidegger reframed phenomenology toward existential questions about being-in-the-world, while Maurice
Practically, phenomenological methods in research employ careful description of lived experience, often through in-depth interviews and