Across
- 3. Reduce experience to its pure, immediate form. Set aside assumptions and focus on what is given in experience.
- 5. Aka bracketing, suspending all judgements about the world.
- 7. Perception that occurs without active involvement or interpretation by the observer.
- 9. The shared experience and mutual influence that arises between individuals, where meanings, actions, and perceptions are co-constructed through interaction and mutual recognition.
- 10. Recognize that consciousness is always "about" something—experience is directed at objects or phenomena.
- 12. Using lived experiences as told by other people to interpret how others sense their lives.
- 14. Identify the pure subject of experience. The ego that constitutes meaning and makes experience possible.
- 15. The everyday, taken-for-granted assumption that the world is self-evidently present and exists independently of consciousness, prior to any reflective examination.
- 18. The process by which consciousness shapes and gives meaning to the world through intentional acts, imbuing objects with value, significance, and sense based on subjective experience.
Down
- 1. The idea that perception is shaped by universal structures of consciousness, allowing for shared, similar experiences of the world across individuals.
- 2. Studying the world as it is perceived.
- 4. The experience of time in phenomenology, involving the way past, present, and future interact to shape our perception of events, often through shifting horizons of expectation and recollection.
- 6. The process by which expertise and embodied knowledge shape how one perceives and interacts with the world, emphasizing the role of training and habit in perception and action.
- 8. The way in which space is experienced and modified by individual and collective subjects, such that spaces are understood not just as physical locations, but as meaningful contexts for action and interpretation.
- 11. Relating to the fundamental, underlying structures that make experience and knowledge possible.
- 13. Uncover the essential qualities of experiences. Identify what makes a phenomenon what it is.
- 16. The type of perception where you have the process of actively engaging with and interpreting the world through sensory experience.
- 17. Philosophy that studies how consciousness experiences and gives meaning to the world through intentional acts and subjective perception.
