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© Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2007 DOI: 10.1163/156916207X234275 Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 38 (2007) 181–216 www.brill.nl/jpp pheno menol ogical p s y c h ology jour nal of Persistent Psychological Meaning of Early Emotional Memories * Magnus Englander Malmö University Abstract

In: Journal of Phenomenological Psychology
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analyses can do both: discover meanings that are in the descriptions that relate back to the acts of the original describer, or the researcher may actively bestow new, psychological meanings on the data by actualizing the psychological perspective. Sometimes it is important to clarify the Lifeworld meaning

In: Journal of Phenomenological Psychology

obtained were predominantly anthro- pomorphic and structured according to a limited set of "event units" whose psychological meaning was highly consistent across the observers. In common with many social psychologists we con- clude that consistency of anthropomorphic description suggests that meaning is

In: Society & Animals

short videotaped episodes of animal behavior. The descriptions obtained were predominantly anthro- pomorphic and structured according to a limited set of “event units” whose psychological meaning was highly consistent across the obser vers. In common with many social psychologists we con- clude that

In: Society & Animals
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with the psychological meaning of ‘depression’ is purely modern. Acknowledgments This article is based on ideas that I first presented at the 48th Conference of the Israel Society for the Promotion of Classical Studies (Tel Aviv, Tel Aviv University, May 29th-30th, 2019). I would like to

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In: Mnemosyne
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ctive reality” is the speci fi c content of transcendental-phenomenological re fl ection. Elaborating this concept allows us to see how phenomenological concepts such as constitution, horizon, and the “tran- scendental” have a tropological, rather than a psychological, meaning. Speci fi cally, the article

In: Research in Phenomenology

advanced university handbook. His conceptual framework includes, among others: psychological meaning, linguistic meaning, connotation, the content of a name, the content of a concept, complete content, characteristic content, constitutive content, pleonastic content. Let us consider some of the

In: The Lvov-Warsaw School and Contemporary Philosophy of Language

flooding an area - perform as a wall, a column or perhaps, in an extreme scenario, a building? Building upon previous arguments highlighted in Dietrich Neumann’s Architecture of the Night, The Illuminated Building, this chapter expands on the opinion that the visual and psychological meaning of

In: Dialectics of Space and Place across Virtual and Corporeal Topographies

essay proposes to evaluate the volition behind the shadow of leather puppet-making in India and demonstrate the entanglement between performance and visual arts there. The first part of this essay explores the archetypal and psychological meanings of shadow in its relationship with myth, knowledge, and

In: Religion and the Arts