| Charles S. Peirce - 1955 - 424 lapas
...PHENOMENOLOGY PHANEROSCOPY [or Phenomenology] is the description of the Phaneron; and by the phaneron I mean the collective total of all that is in any way or...of whether it corresponds to any real thing or not. If you ask present when, and to whose mind, I reply that I leave these questions unanswered, never... | |
| Richard Bernstein - 1971 - 368 lapas
...use of the categories. "Phaneroscopy is the description of the phaneron; and by the phaneron I mean the collective total of all that is in any way or...of whether it corresponds to any real thing or not" ( 1 .284 ) . Phenomenology or . . . phaneroscopy is that study which, supported by the direct observation... | |
| William L. Rosensohn - 1974 - 124 lapas
...experience, the method of their discovery, and Phaneroscopy, the science that describes the phaneron, or the collective total of all that is in any way or in any sense present to the mind, are shown in the context of a single, evolving body of thought — a comprehensive philosophy shaped... | |
| Victorino Tejera - 1988 - 216 lapas
...apt--coordinative or "metaphysical"--categorization. At 1.284 Peirce invented the term phaneron to stand for "the collective total of all that is in any way or in any sense present to the mind ... whether it corresponds to any real thing or not." "Phenomenology," Peirce says at 2.197, "can hardly... | |
| Peter Hamilton - 1992 - 338 lapas
..."Phaneroscopy is the description of thephaneron; and by thephaneron I mean the collective total of all that is in any sense present to the mind, quite regardless...corresponds to any real thing or not." (CP 1.284) Not unlike its European counterpart, Peirce's phenomenology "just contemplates phenomena as they are,... | |
| Carl R. Hausman - 1997 - 260 lapas
...Thus, in 1905, he says: Phaneroscopy is the description of the phaneron; and by the phaneron I mean the collective total of all that is in any way or...of whether it corresponds to any real thing or not. If you ask present when, and to whose mind, I reply that I leave these questions unanswered, never... | |
| Herman Parret - 1994 - 408 lapas
...terms of Peirce's categories of firstness, secondness, and thirdnesss. What Peirce calls a phaneron, "all that is in any way or in any sense present to the mind" (1.284), falls into at least one of the three categories of firstness, secondness, thirdness. Firstness... | |
| Dennis Tedlock, Bruce Mannheim - 1995 - 316 lapas
...the same reason Charles Sanders Peirce did, because he was interested, in his words, in "all that is any way or in any sense present to the mind, quite regardless of whether it corresponds to anything real or not" (Peirce 1958 [1878]: 130ff.). A process of coding raises the question of what... | |
| Eero Tarasti - 1995 - 620 lapas
...Peircean phenomenology of Lieder In terms of the phenomenology of Charles Sanders Peirce, in which "the collective total of all that is in any way or in any genre present to the mind" is grasped through the categories of the Firstness of feeling, the Secondness... | |
| Eero Tarasti, Paul Forsell, Richard Littlefield - 1996 - 668 lapas
...immediately present — precedes semiotics. The object matter of Peirce's phenomenology is the phaneron, "the collective total of all that is in any way or...corresponds to any real thing or not" (CP 1.284). The phaneron can be understood and analyzed by means of the Universal Categories: Firstness, Secondness... | |
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