On the Epoché in Phenomenological Psychology: A Schutzian Response to Zahavi

2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-156
Author(s):  
Michael D. Barber

Abstract Dan Zahavi has questioned whether the use of a transcendental phenomenological epoché is essential for phenomenological psychology. He criticizes the views of Amedeo Giorgi by asserting that Husserl did not view the transcendental reduction as needed for an entrance into phenomenological psychology and that, if one thinks so, phenomenological psychology would be in danger of being absorbed within transcendental phenomenology. Thirdly, rather than envisioning transcendental phenomenology as a purification for phenomenological psychology, Zahavi recommends a dialogue between transcendental phenomenologists and psychologists. However, the two disciplines are closer for Husserl who also conceives phenomenological psychology as a self-standing science, and Giorgi is not as rigid on the necessity of transcendental phenomenology for phenomenological psychology. Alfred Schutz, following Husserl’s “Nachwort,” develops his own distinctive phenomenological psychology that appreciates disciplinary convergences and respects boundaries, while also articulating a wider understanding of epoché as an anthropological fact operative beyond the limits of transcendental phenomenology.

2017 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 214-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis Emanuel Gros

AbstractAlfred Schutz is, without a doubt, one of the phenomenologists that contributed the most to the reflection on how to apply insights from phenomenological philosophy to the, empirical and theoretical, human and social sciences. However, his work tends to be neglected by many of the current advocates of phenomenology within these disciplines. In the present paper, I intend to remedy this situation. In order to do so, I will systematically revisit his mundane and social-scientifically oriented account of phenomenology, which, as I shall show, emerges from a theoretical confrontation with the Husserlian distinction between transcendental phenomenology and phenomenological psychology.


Relation ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 281-300
Author(s):  
Harald Rau
Keyword(s):  

Fachsprache ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 40 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 63-78
Author(s):  
Margarete Flöter-Durr ◽  
Thierry Grass

Despite the work of Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson (1989), the concept of relevance has not enjoyed the popularity it deserved among translators as it appears to be more productive in information science and sociology than in translation studies. The theory of relevance provides underpinnings of a unified account of translation proposed by Ernst-August Gutt. However, if the concept of relevance should take into account all parameters of legal translation, the approach should be pragmatic and not cognitive: The aim of a relevant translation is to produce a legal text in the target language which appears relevant to the lawyer in the target legal system, namely a text that can be used in the same way as the original source text. The legal translator works as a facilitator from one legal system into another and relevance is the core of this pragmatic approach which requires translation techniques like adaptation rather than through-translation or calque (in the terminology of Delisle/Lee-Jahnk/Cormier 1999). This contribution tries to show that relevance theory, which was developed in the field of sociology by Alfred Schütz, could also be applied to translation theory with the aim of producing a correct translation in a concrete situation. Some examples extracted from one year of the practice of an expert law translator (German-French) at the Court of Appeal in the Alsace region illustrate our claim and underpin an approach of legal translation and its heuristics that is both pragmatic and reflexive.


Author(s):  
Eviatar Zerubavel

Following in the rich intellectual footsteps of Emile Durkheim, Karl Mannheim, Alfred Schutz, and Ludwik Fleck, this chapter lays out the foundations for the sociology of thinking, or “cognitive sociology.” Focusing on the impersonal, normative, and conventional dimensions of the way we think (and, as such, on its distinctness from both cognitive individualism and universalism), it highlights the distinctly sociological concern with intersubjectivity as well as epistemic commitment to the study of thought communities, cognitive traditions, cognitive norms, cognitive socialization, cognitive conventions, and the politics of cognition.


2004 ◽  

Der Autor greift die Ansätze von Max Weber, Alfred Schütz und Thomas Luckmann auf und verknüpft diese mit der hermeneutischen Tradition. Zugleich entwirft Soeffner die Programmatik einer "verstehenden Soziologie" und zeigt anhand von Beispielen, wie sich diese operationalisieren lässt. Unter anderem stellt der Autor die Grundlagen und die Methodologie einer visuellen Soziologie vor und befasst sich in dem Beitrag "Authentizitätsfallen und mediale Verspiegelungen" mit einer Anthropologie des Darstellens, Inszenierens und der Performance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 79-93
Author(s):  
Sonia Floriani

Ai fini di un’interpretazione dei modi in cui la migrazione si trasforma nel tempo biografico, in questo saggio concentro l’attenzione sull'esperienza del nóstos. Infatti, analizzando sia i modi in cui cambiano la rappresentazione e la pratica del ritorno nella biografia del migrante, sia le forme in cui si dissolve e si ricostruisce il senso di dimora, propongo alcune ipotesi di lettura dell'esperienza della migrazione. La costruzione delle ipotesi si è avvalsa del ‘dialogo’ con alcune figure di straniero proposte dalla sociologia classica, in particolare da Alfred Schutz, Georg Simmel e Robert Park, e delle narrazioni biografiche raccolte nel corso di una ricerca sulla migrazione italiana del secondo dopoguerra in Canada.


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