phenomenality การใช้
- The phenomenality would entail convergence, if the computational function does.
- Henry counterposed this conception of phenomenality with a radical phenomenology of life.
- Another form of anti-intentionalism associated with John Searle regards phenomenality itself as the " mark of the mental " and sidelines intentionality.
- To be sure, not all phenomena get classified as saturated phenomena, but all saturated phenomena accomplish the one and only paradigm of phenomenality.
- However, as a result of their radical lack of givenness, phenomenality does not actually occur in these abstract objects because little if anything actually appears.
- Rather than beginning with the least given phenomena like logic and mathematics and deriving all other phenomena from them, Marion starts with the most given phenomena to determine phenomenality in general.
- Conceptually, the " vertical world axis ", understood previously as the un-fatiguable, eternal master of mortality, gave way to " Time, the emptiness of all phenomenality ".
- While it seems like physical / functional information about tells us all there is about it, we feel something more for phenomenality because we " have a'substantive'grasp of its nature ."
- The emphasis is on what is being done, thought, and felt at the present moment ( the phenomenality of both client and therapist ), rather than on what was, might be, could be, or should have been.
- Yet in Buddhist metaphysics, Time's non-phenomenality, along with its role as a limiting, destructive factor with respect to all spatial entities implied that the tman itself was " empty of any permanent phenomenal content " ( [ knyata ).
- Though convinced of the truth and validity of classical Christian metaphysical theology, O Leary is also convinced of the need to step back behind it to the matter itself, that is, to the phenomenality of the biblical events in the horizons of contemporary understanding.
- For the saturated phenomenon does not give itself abnormally, making an exception to the definition of phenomenality; to the contrary, its ownmost property is to render thinkable the measure of manifestation in terms of givenness and to recover it in its common-law variety, indeed in the poor phenomenon.
- A third formulation, Husserl's " Principle of all Principles ", states " that " every primordial dator Intuition is a source of authority ( Rechtsquelle ) for knowledge ", that " whatever presents itself in intuition . . . is simply to be accepted as it gives itself out to be ", though " only within the limits in which it then presents itself " . " Marion argues that while the Principle of all Principles places givenness as phenomenality's criterion and achievement, givenness still remains uninterrogated.