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Journal ArticleDOI

A Dance Between the Reduction and Reflexivity: Explicating the "Phenomenological Psychological Attitude"

Linda Finlay
- 01 Jan 2008 - 
- Vol. 39, Iss: 1, pp 1-32
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TLDR
The phenomenological attitude is defined as the process of retaining a wonder and openness to the world while reflexively restraining pre-understandings, as it applies to psychological research as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
This article explores the nature of "the phenomenological attitude," which is understood as the process of retaining a wonder and openness to the world while reflexively restraining pre-understandings, as it applies to psychological research A brief history identifies key philosphical ideas outlining Husserl's formulation of the reductions and subsequent existential-hermeneutic elaborations, and how these have been applied in empirical psychological research Then three concrete descriptions of engaging the phenomenological attitude are offered, highlighting the way the epoche of the natural sciences, the psychological phenomenological reduction and the eidetic reduction can be applied during research interviews Reflections on the impact and value of the researcher's stance show that these reductions can be intertwined with reflexivity and that, in this process, something of a dance occurs—a tango in which the researcher twists and glides through a series of improvised steps In a context of tension and contradictory motions, the researcher slides between striving for reductive focus and reflexive self-awareness; between bracketing pre-understandings and exploiting them as a source of insight Caught up in the dance, researchers must wage a continuous, iterative struggle to become aware of, and then manage, pre-understandings and habitualities that inevitably linger Persistance will reward the researcher with special, if fleeting, moments of disclosure in which the phenomenon reveals something of itself in a fresh way

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Journal ArticleDOI

‘I’m able to put my thoughts into picturing them physically’ – Phenomenological experiences of Dance Movement Psychotherapy in a Secondary School: Unexpected Empowerment over External Contingency

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored eight secondary school participants' subjective experiences of dance movement psychotherapy and how these perceptions relate to prior expectations and/or perceived outcomes from the therapy.
Dissertation

How do fathers make sense of their experience of stillbirth after therapy? : an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis

TL;DR: This work focuses on fathers’ experiences of meeting their stillborn child and the role that gender differences in Infant Loss Research plays in the father’s experience.
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Self-stigma, loneliness and culture among older adults with mental illness residing in nursing homes

TL;DR: The degree of insight into mental illness played a key role in how self-stigma was experienced, while gender and culture were found to influence how loneliness was experienced.

Men's experiences of couples counselling culminating in the decision to discontinue

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References
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Book

Being and Time

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an interpretation of Dasein in terms of temporality, and the Explication of Time as the Transcendental Horizon for the Question of Being.
Book

Phenomenology of Perception

TL;DR: Carman as discussed by the authors described the body as an object and Mechanistic Physiology, and the experience of the body and classical psychology as a Sexed being, as well as the Synthesis of One's Own Body and Motility.
Book

Truth and Method

TL;DR: The ontology of the work of art and its Hermeneutic importance is discussed in this article. But the ontology is not a theory of the human experience, and it does not describe the relationship between art and the human sciences.
Book

Being and Nothingness