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The Reduction

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Title: The Reduction Author: Norm Friesen Last modified by: Norm Friesen Created Date: 2/28/2006 2:52:06 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Reduction


1
The Reduction
  • Norm Friesen
  • March 2006

2
Overview
  • Wonder - Heuristic Reduction
  • Openness - Hermeneutic Reduction
  • Concreteness - Phenomenological Reduction
  • Invariables - Eidetic Reduction
  • Flexible Rationality - Methodological Reduction
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

3
The Reduction
  • Epoche bracketing
  • achieve contact with the world that is as direct
    as possible by suspending prejudgements,
    bracketing assumptions, deconstructing claims,
    and restoring openness.
  • A type of attentiveness
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

4
The Reduction
  • the method of the reduction is meant to bring the
    aspects of meaning that belong to the phenomena
    of our lifeworld into nearness
  • aims to bring into focus the uniqueness of the
    particular phenomenon to which we are oriented
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

5
Heuristic Reduction Wonder
  • Bracket the natural attitude
  • Husserl on the natural attitude
  • Awaken wonder about the phenomenon
  • Wonder occurs when explanation is suspended
  • Examples of Wonder?
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

6
Hermeneutic Reduction Openness
  • "natural standpoint - that objects materially
    exist and exhibit properties that we see as
    emanating from them
  • Resist explanation (objective)
  • Scientific
  • Psychological
  • Logical, intellectual
  • E.g. of delusions in phenomenology
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

7
Hermeneutic Reduction Openness, cont
  • Resist subjective or private feelings,
    preferences, inclinations, or expectations that
    may seduce or tempt one to come to premature,
    wishful, or one-sided understandings of an
    experience
  • E.g. of online education research
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

8
Hermeneutic Reduction
  • It may be necessary to explicate assumptions and
    interests to exorcise them, in an attempt to
    let speak that what wishes to speak.
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

9
Hermeneutic Reduction
  • I found that overall the interaction was pretty
    entertaining and comical. Usually with a chat
    bot its just a textbased interaction, and
    theres not a lot of room to move beyond the
    limits of what the system can do. But here, I
    felt like I could ask her all sorts of questions,
    and that even if she didnt respond in a w that
    you could call normal

10
Phenom. Reduction Concreteness
  • Theories need to be reviewed for how they inform
    experience, by ultimately fail to capture it in
    its inexhaustible richness.
  • examine how theories gloss or hide the
    experiential reality
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

11
Concreteness, example
  • It is finally my turn to step up to the machine.
    As I step up to what feels like a stage with an
    audience in the background, I notice that I have
    to go through a scripted set of steps there is
    no opportunity for variation. Time feels like it
    is speeding up. I reach into my wallet, and pull
    out my bankcard from its protective outer casing.
    I slide my card into the machine, and for a
    moment wonder if it will correctly read my card's
    information. I wonder at what angle the camera
    embedded in the machine is monitoring me

12
Concreteness, example
  • The space around me during my transaction seems
    constrained and regulated. There is a high
    sensitivity to the space. As I type in my
    information, I hover around the screen to conceal
    the type of transaction that I am making. When
    it comes time to typing in my personal
    identification number, I then cover the numbered
    keypad to not let any trace of that information
    leak out to anyone in line.
  • (http//learningspaces.org/n/papers/ExperiencingS
    urveillance.doc)

13
Eidetic Reduction
  • Eidos an immutable universal or generalization
    about human nature or human life.
  • What is see past or through the particularity
    concreteness of lived experience
  • Concerned with "possible" human experiences-not
    with experiences that are presumed to be
    universal or shared by all humans irrespective of
    time, culture, gender, or other
    circumstance(from Max van Manen,
    www.phenomenologyonline.com)

14
Eidetic Reduction
  • The phenomenological determination of meaning is
    itself always indeterminate, always tentative,
    always incomplete, always inclined to question
    assumptions by returning again and again to lived
    experience itself
  • Bracketing of incidental meaning(from Max van
    Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

15
Eidetic variation
  • Vary one aspect of the experience to make it a
    (slightly) different experience. Through that,
    discover what is essential to it.
  • Patterns of meaning or themes belonging to a
    particular phenomenon can begin to emerge themes
    are working material for phenomenological writing
  • (from Max van Manen, www.phenomenologyonline.com)

16
Eidetic Variation Example
  • Imagine a situation in which two mothers are
    speaking to one another by telephone. Their
    respective children are playing together in an
    area between their two houses. As neighbors, both
    mothers can watch the children through their own
    open windows. The subject of the telephone
    conversation is the behavior of the children at
    play and the behaviors of the children in
    general.

17
Eidetic Variation Example
  • Imagine an altered situation in which the two
    mothers have opened the windows and are calling
    back and forth. In reference with the objective
    aspect of space, this structure of social praxis
    is labelled, face-to-face-communication-
    from-a-distance.
  • Calling across to one another through the open
    window obviously includes the acoustical space in
    between. (See http//learningspaces.org/articles)

18
Methodological Reduction
  • Bracket all established investigative methods or
    techniques and seek or invent an approach that
    seems to fit most appropriately the
    phenomenological topic under study.
  • Flexible narrative rationality
  • E.g. Gagnon, Rochelle (2003). Understanding
    Depression.
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