Davis Phenomenological Method
Davis Phenomenological Method
Davis Phenomenological Method
Davis
uncritical affirmation of the world is the natural standpoint, to which he contrasts the
phenomenological standpoint. Phenomenology involves a radical alteration of conscious-
ness—a complete shift in attitude toward what appears that involves a suspension of
the natural attitude.3 Yet this “mere change of standpoint” holds “the key to all genuine
philosophy.”4
According to Husserl, at least, phenomenology was to be a presuppositionless phi-
losophy. In order for phenomena to appear in an unencumbered way as the intentional
relations of phenomenological consciousness, we must suspend our everyday assump-
tions about phenomena as well as our theoretical predispositions. This process of
“bracketing” or “putting out of play” is what Husserl adopted a term from the ancient
Greek skeptics to describe: the epochē. Only through this arduous critical exercise can
we reveal phenomena as they are.
The phenomenological and eidetic reductions are the other side of the same coin, so to
speak, of the epochē. Implementing the epochē is the first step in the phenomenological
reduction. (It is first logically rather than temporally.) We can think of the word reduc-
tion in its culinary sense such that a sauce is reduced to its essence: its defining character
becomes unmistakably manifest. By setting aside habitual biases, the phenomenological
reduction provides free access to real and potential experience of phenomena con-
ceived within the intentional relationship, while the eidetic reduction provides access to
“invariant essential structures” of phenomena.5 These ideals or essential structures are
possible only through transcendental reflection. That is, the conditions of the possibility
of the appearances are disclosed through this intense reflection.
And so, by implementing the skeptical attitude of the epochē and at once engaging
in the phenomenological and eidetic reductions, a field of transcendental subjectivity
is revealed as the condition of the possibility of the appearance of phenomena within
intentional relations.6 It is important to note here that Husserl did not equate transcen-
dental subjectivity with the sovereign subjectivity of early modern Western philosophy’s
models of the individual. Transcendental reflection reveals that the subjectivity of the
Cartesian “I think,” for example, is but one psychological aspect of the intentional rela-
tion of consciousness in all its possibilities.
So phenomenology is a rigorous quest asking after the essential structures of appear-
ances. They can be disclosed only within the context of intentionality. By bracketing out
the natural attitude—the aforementioned habitual biases and theoretical biases—the
phenomenon is reduced to its essence. The disclosed structures of phenomena bespeak
a certain propriety. For Husserl, especially, the phenomenological method leads us to
the things themselves.7
Husserl’s phenomenology developed constantly throughout his career, yet its status
as a purification project remained constant. The purification process of knowledge is
achieved only through transcendental phenomenology. It is to be “won,” as Husserl fre-
quently states. This rhetoric of winning out against the limitations, biases, errors, and
vicissitudes of everyday experience and theoretical presuppositions alludes to a crisis in
our understanding of the world. Husserl believed that these crises, both theoretical and
practical, could be addressed only through employing the phenomenological method.
Now we must consider anew the value of critical phenomenology in addressing con-
temporary crises that we understand in terms of intersectionality.