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*Phenomenologists tend to recognize the role of description in universal, a priori, or "eidetic" terms as prior to explanation by means of causes, purposes, or grounds; and
 
*Phenomenologists tend to recognize the role of description in universal, a priori, or "eidetic" terms as prior to explanation by means of causes, purposes, or grounds; and
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*Phenomenologists tend to debate whether or not what Husserl calls the transcendental phenomenological epochê and reduction is useful or even possible.
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*Phenomenologists tend to debate whether or not what Husserl calls the transcendental phenomenological epochê and reduction is useful or even possible. [http://www.phenomenologycenter.org/phenom.htm source]
[http://www.phenomenologycenter.org/phenom.htm source]
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For the more general philosophical movement of phenomenology, see the [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/phenomenology/ Phenomenology article] in the ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy''.
For the more general philosophical movement of phenomenology, see http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/phenomenology/.
      
===Functionalism===
 
===Functionalism===