Phenomenology invites us to revise our senses, our judgements, to no longer consider as an absolute truth what we think that we have mastered but instead to stay afloat in the flows of phenomenality. |
This would suggest that phenomenality was inherently intentional, while intentionality was not inherently phenomenal. |
If any content that can be entertained experientially can also be entertained unconsciously, then it will not be contents alone that give an experience its phenomenality. |
Henry opposed this conception of the phenomenality as a radical phenomenology of life. |
Or is phenomenality present also in cognitve experiences of thinking such-and-such, or of perception bearing conceptual as well as sensory content, or also in volitional or conative bodily action? |
Levinas's text here echoes his 1961 claims about the face as expression that pierces through phenomenality. |