0 a person who studies phenomena (= things that exist and can be seen, felt, tasted, etc.) and how we experience them: --
For phenomenologists, the purpose of research is to get as close as possible to the realities underlying human interaction.
Famous philosophers of the time include Heidegger, the phenomenologist.
Wolfenstein is a particle phenomenologist, a theorist who focuses primarily on connecting theoretical physics to experimental observations.
Finally, phenomenology is considered to be oriented on discovery, and therefore phenomenologists gather research using methods that are far less restricting than in other sciences.
Phenomenologists would rather group presumptions through a process called "phenomenological epoche".
Fourth, phenomenologists prefer to gather capta, or "conscious experience", rather than traditional data.
Such interpretive transpositions do not make the ethnomethodologist a phenomenologist, or ethnomethodology a form of phenomenology.
He was the only major phenomenologist of the first half of the twentieth century to engage extensively with the sciences and especially with descriptive psychology.
Fourth, phenomenologists prefer to gather capta, or conscious experience, rather than traditional data.
Physicists who work at the interplay of theory and experiment are called phenomenologists.