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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 18, 2026

Enactive Phenomenological Approach to the Trier Social Stress Test: A Mixed Methods Point of View
05:26

Enactive Phenomenological Approach to the Trier Social Stress Test: A Mixed Methods Point of View

Published on: January 7, 2019

[Social actors and phenomenologic modelling].

Simon Laflamme1

  • 1Université Laurentienne - Sociologie, 935, chemin du lac Ramsey, Susbury Ontario P3E 2C6, Canada. slaflamme@laurentienne.ca

Canadian Review of Sociology = Revue Canadienne De Sociologie
|October 6, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study critiques the restrictive nature of the phenomenological approach in social sciences, proposing a more complex, relational understanding of the individual for systemic analysis.

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Area of Science:

  • Social Sciences
  • Phenomenology
  • Systemic Analysis

Context:

  • The phenomenological approach dominates individual and subjectivity analyses in social sciences.
  • Its conceptual framework is restrictive, defining humans as rational, conscious, and autonomous.
  • This excludes nonrational and nonconscious aspects of human activity.

Purpose:

  • To address the limitations of the phenomenological approach in social sciences.
  • To propose a framework for systemic analysis to understand individual complexity.
  • To bridge the gap between phenomenology and systemic analysis.

Summary:

  • The phenomenological approach's restrictive definitions limit the analysis of human subjectivity.
  • It struggles to incorporate nonrational, nonconscious, and relational aspects of human activity.
  • This article offers a method for systemic analysis to embrace a more complex view of the individual.

Impact:

  • Enhances the capacity of social sciences to analyze complex human behavior.
  • Facilitates the integration of phenomenological insights with systemic methodologies.
  • Enables a more comprehensive understanding of the individual within social systems.