Livre | Chapitre
Meaning horizon, paraphrase, and phenomenological investigations in psychology
pp. 189-198
Résumé
The integration of recent developments in philosophical phenomenology with those in discourse analysis may contribute to clarification of phenomenological methods in psychology. We argue that (1) the phenomenological analysis of implicit (horizonal) meanings enables precise identification of paraphrasing statements within discourse, (2) paraphrasing statements within discourse form natural, hierarchically arranged meaning units, and (3) the relations between such meaning units, although largely implicit, correspond to the structure of subjectivity.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Mos Leendert (1988) Recent trends in theoretical psychology: proceedings of the second biannual conference of the international society for theoretical psychology, april 20–25, 1987, banff, Alberta, canada. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 189-198
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4612-3902-4_19
Citation complète:
Kuiken Donald, Wild T Cameron, 1988, Meaning horizon, paraphrase, and phenomenological investigations in psychology. In L. Mos (ed.) Recent trends in theoretical psychology (189-198). Dordrecht, Springer.