Phenomenology: Genesis and Objectives

R.GNANASEKARAN

Abstract: Joseph Kockelmans portrays phenomenology as a circle of vagueness. He calls attention to that the term has a long history in theory, with researchers characterizing it in different ways. Still, there is accord that Edmund Husserl was the first to utilize this term as the name for a precise and unmistakable philosophical position. The majority of his works were not deciphered into English until decades after his passing. What's more, in any occasion, his unadulterated thinking would not have been helpful for the further improvement of the sociologies. The upshot is that his impact on human science has been completely roundabout. What we think about phenomenology is a form of Husserl's tenet that comes to us through the industrious endeavors of his understudy, Alfred Schutz, and Schutz's understudies, Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann.

Title: Phenomenology: Genesis and Objectives

Author: R.GNANASEKARAN

International Journal of Social Science and Humanities Research

ISSN 2348-3156 (Print), ISSN 2348-3164 (online)

Research Publish Journals

Vol. 4, Issue 1, January 2016 – March 2016

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Phenomenology: Genesis and Objectives by R.GNANASEKARAN