Epoché

Epoché (ἐποχή epokhē, "suspension"[1]) is an ancient Greek term which, in its philosophical usage, describes the state where all judgments about non-evident matters are suspended. This concept was developed by the Pyrrhonist school of philosophy. It plays an implicit role in subsequent skeptical thought, as in René Descartes' epistemic principle of methodic doubt. The term was popularized in philosophy by Edmund Husserl. Husserl elaborates the notion of 'phenomenological epoché' or 'bracketing' in Ideas I. Through the systematic procedure of 'phenomenological reduction', one is thought to be able to suspend judgment regarding the general or naive philosophical belief in the existence of the external world, and thus examine phenomena as they are originally given to consciousness.[2]

Epoché and skepticism

Epoché played an important role in Pyrrhonism, the skeptical philosophy named after Pyrrho. Pyrrhonian skeptics refer to themselves as zetetikoi ("searchers"). They do not dogmatically assert the inability to know anything: the word skepsis means "inquiry, examination." [3] According to them, only by refusing either to affirm or to deny the truth of what we cannot know, can we achieve ataraxia.[4]

Without actually claiming that we do not know anything, Pyrrhonism argues that the preferred attitude to be adopted is epoché, i.e., the suspension of judgment or the withholding of assent.[5] It would be a contradiction to boldly assert that nothing can be known since that very proposition itself would then be elevated to the status of something which is known. None of this entails that we have no rationale to choose one kind of action over another; rather, one kind of life or one kind of action cannot be definitively said to be the 'correct' way or action. Instead of a life of inaction, the Skeptic insists that one normally ought to live according to customs, laws, and traditions.

Epoché and phenomenology

In phenomenological research epoché is described as a process involved in blocking biases and assumptions in order to explain a phenomenon in terms of its own inherent system of meaning. One actual technique is known as bracketing. This involves systematic steps to "set aside" various assumptions and beliefs about a phenomenon in order to examine how the phenomenon presents itself in the world of the participant.[6]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ἐποχή in Liddell and Scott's Greek–English Lexicon.
  2. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. "The Phenomenological Reduction".
  3. TROWBRIDGE, John. Skepticism and Pluralism - ways of living a life of awareness as recommended by the 'Zhuangzi' . University of Hawai'i. August, 2004, p. 74.
  4. Free On-line Dictionary of Philosophy: "epoché".
  5. Encyclopædia Britannica Online "Pyrrhonism." Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2011. 28 Nov. 2011.
  6. Christensen, T.M., Brumfield, K.A. (2010). Phenomenological designs: The philosophy of phenomenological research. In C.J Sheperis, J.S Young, & M.H. Daniels (Eds.), Counseling research: Quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, Inc.

External links

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