0 a person who studies phenomena (= things that exist and can be seen, felt, tasted, etc.) and how we experience them:
Famous philosophers of the time include Heidegger, the phenomenologist.
For phenomenologists, the purpose of research is to get as close as possible to the realities underlying human interaction.
Strictly speaking, Jung is not a phenomenologist.
Phenomenologists from both East and West have proposed ways to deal with this problem.
Being a phenomenologist, he knows that architecture alone cannot be spiritual.
According to the phenomenologist, the natural sciences remain bound to the natural standpoint in that they faithfully accept, without examination, a belief in the exterior world.
The phenomenologist rejects this formulation and replaces it with one centered on defining the self as emerging in the process of its encounter with the world.
Like the existentialists and phenomenologists, he sees the ambiguity of life as the basis of creativity.
For the phenomenologist, society and technology co-constitute each other; they are each other's ongoing condition, or possibility for being what they are.
Phenomenologists look at the complex phenomena observed in experiment and work to relate them to fundamental theory.