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related 0.60 — strongly supporting 5 facts
Phenomenology is a philosophical framework used to study the structure and experience of consciousness, as evidenced by its historical development [1] and its role in Integrated Information Theory {fact:2, fact:4}. Furthermore, the 'phenomenology of consciousness' is explicitly discussed as a core subject of inquiry {fact:5, fact:6} and academic research [2].
Facts (5)
Sources
Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2025 ... plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
referenceIn the German and European sphere, interest in the larger structure of experience led to the development of phenomenology, which expanded the study of consciousness into social, bodily, and interpersonal realms through the work of Edmund Husserl (1913, 1929), Martin Heidegger (1927), and Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1945).
Consciousness and Cognitive Sciences journal-psychoanalysis.eu 1 fact
quoteLike other attempts to strip away interpretation and reveal the basic facts of consciousness to rigorous observation, such as the Impressionistic movements in the arts [sic] and the Introspectionist psychologies of Wundt, Titchener and others, Phenomenology has failed to find a single settled method that everyone could agree upon.
Quantum Approaches to Consciousness plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
referenceMasafumi Oizumi, Larissa Albantakis, and Giulio Tononi published the article "From the phenomenology to the mechanisms of consciousness: Integrated information theory 3.0" in PLoS Computational Biology in 2014.
AI Sessions #9: The Case Against AI Consciousness (with Anil Seth) conspicuouscognition.com 1 fact
claimThe phenomenology of consciousness is plausibly an intrinsic and inescapable dimension of time.
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2025 Edition) plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
referenceLuke Roelofs and Philip Goff authored 'In Defence of Phenomenal Sharing', forthcoming in the collection 'The Phenomenology of Self-Awareness and Conscious Subjects' edited by Bugnon, Nida-Rümelin, and O’Conaill.