Social science is in crisis. The task of social science is to study “man in situation”: to understand the world as it is for “man”. This thesis charges that this crisis consists in a failure to properly address the philosophical anthropological question “What is man?”. The various social scientific methodologies who have as their object “man ” suffer rampant disagreements because they presuppose, rather than consider, what is meant by “man”. It is our intention to show that the root of the crisis is that social science can provide no formal definition of “man”. In order to understand this we propose a phenomenological analysis into the essence of social science. This phenomenological approach will give us reason to abandon the (sexist) word...
Religion is ever present with human being. This is because man from his origin is seen to be incurab...
At present there are two predominant world outlooks on anthropology. On one side, there is Christian...
What is social science? Does social scientific knowledge differ from other kinds of knowledge, such ...
In everyday life, people move on the world that has been covered with interpretations and categories...
What is an individual? What are the most important attributes of a human being? What shall we speak ...
Can human studies be scientific? The question is addressed by considering four others. What does it ...
Central to this article is a basic philosophical concept of the nature of man ’ knowledge which exis...
Taking into consideration the relationship between anthropology and social ethics it seems appropria...
In the face of continuing debate about the adequacy and definition of the concept of ‘religion’, thi...
In the effort to conceptualise social phenomena, social scientists are faced with the fundamental ep...
This paper is a critical engagement with analytical tools social science has used to interpret relig...
How did phenomenology inspire anthropology to re-evaluate its principal method: participant observat...
The question of method is one of the central issues in the philosophy of the social sciences. A domi...
The phenomenology of religion, alongside the history of religions, forms part of a larger field init...
In this book, the words ‘science’ and ‘social science’ are used in their limited sense tha...
Religion is ever present with human being. This is because man from his origin is seen to be incurab...
At present there are two predominant world outlooks on anthropology. On one side, there is Christian...
What is social science? Does social scientific knowledge differ from other kinds of knowledge, such ...
In everyday life, people move on the world that has been covered with interpretations and categories...
What is an individual? What are the most important attributes of a human being? What shall we speak ...
Can human studies be scientific? The question is addressed by considering four others. What does it ...
Central to this article is a basic philosophical concept of the nature of man ’ knowledge which exis...
Taking into consideration the relationship between anthropology and social ethics it seems appropria...
In the face of continuing debate about the adequacy and definition of the concept of ‘religion’, thi...
In the effort to conceptualise social phenomena, social scientists are faced with the fundamental ep...
This paper is a critical engagement with analytical tools social science has used to interpret relig...
How did phenomenology inspire anthropology to re-evaluate its principal method: participant observat...
The question of method is one of the central issues in the philosophy of the social sciences. A domi...
The phenomenology of religion, alongside the history of religions, forms part of a larger field init...
In this book, the words ‘science’ and ‘social science’ are used in their limited sense tha...
Religion is ever present with human being. This is because man from his origin is seen to be incurab...
At present there are two predominant world outlooks on anthropology. On one side, there is Christian...
What is social science? Does social scientific knowledge differ from other kinds of knowledge, such ...