framing stakeholder analyses 111
By: aporia pidgeon
Category: (uN)HiDDeN, a pidgeon's eye view, clay pidgeon shooting, fair game design, framing stakeholder analyses, modelling aporia green, prismer's dilemma, support triad
By: aporia pidgeon
Category: (uN)HiDDeN, a pidgeon's eye view, clay pidgeon shooting, fair game design, framing stakeholder analyses, modelling aporia green, prismer's dilemma, support triad
[...] that the loop has one continuous surface only. [For example, you can try tracing this surface with the pad of a finger tip all the way around.]
Now, although each surface at any one moment may have opposing approaches to it, the surface as a whole does not division the domain-space of research approach. The dualities of our previous two-dimensional approximation to our loop are thus appearing to dissolve.
In particular, with regards to this session on phenomenology and the social sciences, we notice that the relationship between phenomenology and ethnomethodology becomes apparent – one as a 1st person phenomenology, the other as a 3rd person phenomenology of Logos. Ethnomethodology here is described as a distinctly phenomenological approach to the social sciences following Anderson, Sharrock and Hughes (1985).
– Immersion in vivo –
So, one more exercise in tracing our analysis therefore. Let’s imagine what would happen if you were to place your hand-made mobius in some water and wait for the paper to become transluscent. Perhaps you would notice some mixing of the red and the new line that you yourself drew. We know that the line you drew went all the way along our surface in a single loop, but it had previously appeared that the red line had only spanned half the distance. Now, in immersion, we find that actually, the red line had existed all the way around all along, it had only had appeared to disappear. Having said this, however, we might note that both would arguably be appearing as a rather different kind of a colour, with it’s own inherent relationships.
In short, this immersion explicates the in vivo experience of an “interpretive” researcher – the Lebenswelt pair of Husserl’s transcendental phenomenological reduction and the epoche of the ethnomethodologist at the surface of our interactional interface with the lifeworld.
– From closed world to infinite universe –
One final experiential demonstration therefore. If I may invite you to enter into a state of phenomenological reduction, or epoche – whichever you tend to use when doing your own phenomenology.
Now, imagine a perfect circle in front of you, just out of arms’ reach. If you could point to that circle with the tip of your finger and trace its outline in the air. Follow your finger tip, as you observe the circle being [...]