6533b856fe1ef96bd12b328f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Auditory Phenomena and Human Life: Phenomenological Experience

Ineta Kivle

subject

Human life:HUMANITIES and RELIGION::History and philosophy subjects::Philosophy subjects [Research Subject Categories]hermeneuticsInterconnectednessReflexive pronounEpistemologyPhenomenology (philosophy)SilenceonthologymimesisSonority hierarchyActive listeningartworkHermeneuticsplayPsychology

description

The present study analyzes auditory phenomena from the point of view of hermeneutical phenomenology and shows their interconnectedness with the understanding of man, hearing and listening within the context of human life as the horizon of meaningful sonority and silence. The central questions to be answered in this study are these: What is experienced as sound and sonority? How does a human see himself in inclusion of his being from where he listens, understands, and speaks? The study explores the classical standpoints of Husserl’s phenomenology and other philosophical apprehensions which confirm that auditory phenomena is not to be apprehended solely as an isolated horizon but as being permeated by the visible, the perceptible, and the comprehensible.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-77516-6_29