the discipline of phenomenology, has been practiced, with or without the name, for many centuries. When Hindu and Buddhist philosophers reflected on states of consciousness achieved in a variety of meditative states, they were practicing phenomenology.
When Descartes, Hume, and Kant characterized states of perception, thought, and imagination, they were practicing phenomenology.
When Brentano classified varieties of mental phenomena (defined by the directedness of consciousness), he was practicing phenomenology.
When William James appraised kinds of mental activity in the stream of consciousness (including their embodiment and their dependence on habit), he too was practicing phenomenology. And when recent analytic philosophers of mind have addressed issues of consciousness and intentionality, they have often been practicing phenomenology.
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