Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory

This paper proposes an anatomy of the phenomena of life and of correlate qualitative modes of empirical research, theory, and professional practice concerned with health and well-being. I explicate the qualitative dynamic operative at every level of order, from the biological realm of cells and orga...

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Main Author: Robert Mugerauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2010-07-01
Series:International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/5097/5759
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spelling doaj-1af109731ce34617b4a6dbc8722cbc922020-11-24T23:23:54ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being1748-26231748-26312010-07-015211210.3402/qhw.v5i2.5097Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theoryRobert MugerauerThis paper proposes an anatomy of the phenomena of life and of correlate qualitative modes of empirical research, theory, and professional practice concerned with health and well-being. I explicate the qualitative dynamic operative at every level of order, from the biological realm of cells and organisms, through distinctively human lifeworld experiences and practices, to communities of organisms in ecosystems and bio-cultural regions. This paper clarifies the unity of the dimensions of life and aligns these with demonstrated and emerging contributions of hermeneutical phenomenology and current complexity–autopoietic theory (including disciplinary and professional interpretations of empirical findings). The intent is begin to delineate a common framework upon which we could build—facilitating better understanding of the distinctive contributions of each specialization as well as the integration of diverse qualitative approaches with each other (and with quantitative complements). http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/5097/5759Phenomenologycomplexityorganismpersonenvironmenthealth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Mugerauer
spellingShingle Robert Mugerauer
Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory
International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
Phenomenology
complexity
organism
person
environment
health
author_facet Robert Mugerauer
author_sort Robert Mugerauer
title Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory
title_short Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory
title_full Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory
title_fullStr Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory
title_full_unstemmed Anatomy of life and well-being: A framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory
title_sort anatomy of life and well-being: a framework for the contributions of phenomenology and complexity theory
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
issn 1748-2623
1748-2631
publishDate 2010-07-01
description This paper proposes an anatomy of the phenomena of life and of correlate qualitative modes of empirical research, theory, and professional practice concerned with health and well-being. I explicate the qualitative dynamic operative at every level of order, from the biological realm of cells and organisms, through distinctively human lifeworld experiences and practices, to communities of organisms in ecosystems and bio-cultural regions. This paper clarifies the unity of the dimensions of life and aligns these with demonstrated and emerging contributions of hermeneutical phenomenology and current complexity–autopoietic theory (including disciplinary and professional interpretations of empirical findings). The intent is begin to delineate a common framework upon which we could build—facilitating better understanding of the distinctive contributions of each specialization as well as the integration of diverse qualitative approaches with each other (and with quantitative complements).
topic Phenomenology
complexity
organism
person
environment
health
url http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/5097/5759
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