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Phenomenological research methods

Donald Polkinghorne

pp. 41-60

Research methods are plans used in the pursuit of knowledge. They are outlines of investigative journeys, laying out previously developed paths, which, if followed by researchers, are supposed to lead to valid knowledge. These paths are drawn on maps based on assumptions about the nature of reality and the processes of human understanding. The map developed for Western science during the past three centuries is based on the notion that reality consists of natural objects and that knowledge is a description of these objects as they exist in themselves. The purpose of the paths laid out on this map is to eliminate the distorting influence of personal perspective and the subjective properties of researchers.

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Full citation:

Polkinghorne, D. (1989)., Phenomenological research methods, in R. Valle & S. Halling (eds.), Existential-phenomenological perspectives in psychology, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 41-60.

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