An example of method-decomposing on “understanding experience” in phenomenology
On 6 ideas in phenomenology on the topic of
"understanding experience" and describe 1 main claim on this topic in
terms of Toulmin's model of argument.
Phenomenology offers several core ideas about how we understand
experience. Here are six key ideas, followed by a Toulmin‑style articulation of
one main claim.
1. Experience as lived and
first‑person
Phenomenology treats experience as “lived” (Erlebnis) from the first‑person
perspective, focusing on what it is like to undergo particular experiences
rather than reducing them to third‑person mechanisms such as brain states or
behavioral outputs.
2. Intentionality of
consciousness
Consciousness is always “of” something: every experience is
intentionally directed toward an object (perceiving, remembering, fearing,
desiring). Understanding experience thus means clarifying the structures of
intentionality and how objects show up within conscious acts.
3. Bracketing or
“phenomenological reduction”
Phenomenologists suspend (bracket) assumptions about the external,
causal reality of objects (epoché) in order to describe how they appear in
experience. This step aims to preserve the purity of subjective appearance
rather than explaining experience away scientifically.
4. Lifeworld and pre‑reflective
structures
The “lifeworld” (Lebenswelt) refers to the pre‑theoretical, everyday
world in which we already act and understand, prior to explicit philosophical
or scientific theorizing. Phenomenological understanding of experience
therefore includes uncovering these background structures that make reflection
possible.
5. Embodied and situated
experience
Phenomenology emphasizes that experience is not that of a disembodied
mind; it is embodied (e.g., through bodily perception and affordances) and
situated in a social‑historical context. This leads to an understanding of
experience as already interwoven with social practices, language, and culture.
6. Hermeneutic dimension of
understanding
Hermeneutic phenomenology (e.g., Heidegger, Gadamer) stresses that
understanding experience is interpretive: we never meet phenomena “raw” but
always through prior meanings, traditions, and practical engagements.
Understanding experience thus becomes a dialogical reconstruction of meaning‑structures
in the lifeworld.
A main claim in Toulmin’s
model:
Claim (C):
Phenomenological description is the most appropriate method for understanding
the meaning of human experience, because it preserves the first‑person
givenness of experience without reducing it to causal or objective
explanations.
In Toulmin’s terms:
·
Grounds (G):
Phenomenology provides detailed, first‑person descriptions of how objects,
emotions, and situations appear in lived experience (e.g., as in Husserlian
analyses of perception, memory, or imaginative acts).
·
Warrant (W):
If a method stays close to the way phenomena are given in consciousness, then
it yields a more adequate understanding of human experience than methods that
explain experience away via external causes.
·
Backing (B):
Empirical qualitative research using phenomenology (e.g., in health professions
education) shows that such descriptions are systematically useful for learning
from others’ experiences and for reconstructing their lifeworlds.
·
Qualification (Q):
This claim holds primarily for understanding the meaning and structure of
experience; it does not replace causal or explanatory accounts in the natural
sciences.
·
Rebuttal/Reservation (R):
Critics may argue that first‑person descriptions are too subjective or
unverifiable, but phenomenologists respond that intersubjective validation
comes through shared lifeworld structures and careful methodological
reflection.
Thus, through Toulmin’s model, phenomenology stakes a claim that
understanding experience requires descriptive, first‑person‑oriented methods
that leave the intentional and lifeworld structures of experience intact.
Please illustrate the ideas a bit more in the case of
"understanding gen z customers' experience of happiness when visiting the
Ocean Park of Hong Kong.
Phenomenology can
help you understand how Gen Z customers experience happiness at Ocean Park Hong
Kong by focusing on how this happiness shows up for them, rather
than just measuring satisfaction scores or social‑media metrics. Here are the
same six ideas, now illustrated in this concrete case.
1. Experience as lived and first‑person
Phenomenology
would ask: What is it like for a Gen Z visitor to feel happiness while
walking through Ocean Park?
You would not just count “smiles” or likes; you would attend to descriptions of
sensations (e.g., the thrill of the roller‑coaster, the relief of shade after
waiting in line, the warmth of laughing with friends), emotional shifts, and
how time feels “slowed down” or “flying by.”
2. Intentionality of consciousness
A Gen Z visitor’s
happiness is always happiness about something:
·
it might be
directed at the pandas, the ocean tunnel, the view from the
cable car, or the moment when a friend records a TikTok reaction.
Phenomenology would map how these objects appear in different acts: perceptual
joy when seeing animals up close, anticipatory joy before a ride, or social joy
when sharing the moment in a group selfie.
3. Phenomenological reduction (bracketing)
To understand
their happiness, you would suspend assumptions such as:
·
“They’re only here
for Instagram,” or “Happiness here is just about rides and prices.”
Instead, you would ask participants to describe exactly what
made them feel happy at specific moments, and then analyze how Ocean Park
“shows up” in those descriptions—without reducing it to “marketing success” or
“ticket sales.”
4. Lifeworld and background meanings
Gen Z visitors
bring with them a lifeworld shaped by digital culture, K‑pop,
school stress, and social anxiety.
Their happiness might be meaningful partly because Ocean Park offers an escape
from school pressure, a chance to perform “coolness” on camera, or a rare in‑person
bonding with friends who usually interact only online. Phenomenology would
uncover how these background concerns shape what counts as “happy” there.
5. Embodied and situated experience
Their happiness is
not purely “mental”; it is embodied (e.g., butterflies in the stomach on a
ride, tired feet after long walks, the coolness of the air‑conditioned
aquarium) and situated (e.g., differences between weekdays vs weekends, peak
hours vs quiet mornings, family vs friend groups).
Phenomenology would attend to such bodily and spatial cues as part of what
makes an experience “happy” or “overwhelming” rather than treating happiness as
a detached attitude.
6. Hermeneutic (interpretive) understanding
Their happiness is
also already interpreted through prior meanings: what they’ve seen on
Instagram, travel vlogs, or school friends’ stories.
A phenomenological‑hermeneutic interview might unfold dialogically, asking:
·
“When that moment
felt happy, what did it remind you of?”
·
“How did this
compare to trips to Disneyland or local theme parks?”
Here, understanding becomes reconstructing how Gen Z makes sense of Ocean Park
happiness within their own interpretive world.
Toulmin‑style main claim (adapted to this
case)
Claim (C):
To understand Gen Z customers’ happiness at Ocean Park Hong Kong, managers
should rely on phenomenological descriptions of lived experience rather than on
purely quantitative satisfaction data.
·
Grounds (G):
Gen Z visitors describe happiness in terms of specific moments (e.g., “seeing
the panda yawn,” “laughing with friends in the queue,” “the view from the
top”), which cannot be fully captured by Likert‑scale ratings.
·
Warrant (W):
Only methods that stay close to the first‑person givenness of experience
(phenomenological interviews, experience‑mapping) can reveal how happiness is
structured by intentionality, embodiment, and social context.
·
Backing (B):
Qualitative phenomenological studies in tourism and health‑care show that such
descriptions help practitioners reconstruct patients’ or visitors’ lifeworlds
in a way that informs empathetic design and service improvements.
·
Qualification (Q):
This holds for understanding the meaning and structure of
happiness; it does not replace econometric or marketing research on pricing or
operational efficiency.
·
Rebuttal/Reservation
(R):
Some managers may object that “stories” are too soft or subjective, but
phenomenologists argue that careful, systematic description—backed by inter‑rater
checks and thematic analysis—can yield robust, actionable insights into Gen Z
experience.
In short, a
phenomenological approach to “Gen Z happiness at Ocean Park” means treating
each visit as a whole lived situation, not just a set of data points, and
letting Gen Z’s own descriptions show you what happiness does and means in
that specific context.
Relevant links: on ALRA 2026.
A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.
No comments:
Post a Comment