SECOND-PERSON IN-DEPTH PHENOMENOLOGICAL
INQUIRY AS AN APPROACH FOR STUDYING
ENACTION OF BELIEFS
Urban Kordeš and
Florian Klauser
Ljubljana, Slovenia
INDECS 14(4), 369-377, 2016 DOI 10.7906/indecs.14.4.5 Full text available here. |
Received: 9th October 2016. |
ABSTRACT
Phenomenology and empirical research are not naturally compatible and devising an empirical technique aiming at researching experience is a challenge. This article presents second-person in-depth phenomenological inquiry - a technique that tries to meet this challenge by allowing the transformation of a participant greatly interested in the investigation of their own subjective experience, into a co-researcher. It then provides an example of this technique being used in a study on enaction of beliefs, more closely showing the cooperative research process of researcher and co-researcher and its result: a grounded theory. The article ends with a discussion on the techniques strengths and weaknesses.
KEY WORDS
phenomenological inquiry, first-person perspective, experience, enaction, belief
CLASSIFICATION
APA: 2340, 2380
JEL: D83, D84, Z19