
doi: 10.19079/eajp.1.1.71
handle: 10447/526445
Edmund Husserl’s phenomenological method has mostly been applied to epistemological questions. However, it also has great potential for analysing phenomena of social and political relevance. This text outlines a phenomenology of social precariousness, showing how it impacts the experiential, temporal, perceptual and self-perceptual structures of the subject, thereby influencing intergenerational relations.
Public Ethics, Precariousness, Precarity, Phenomenological Time, Phenomenological Time; Autonomy; Precariousness; Precarity; Public Ethics, Autonomy
Public Ethics, Precariousness, Precarity, Phenomenological Time, Phenomenological Time; Autonomy; Precariousness; Precarity; Public Ethics, Autonomy
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