释义 |
noema Philos.|nəʊˈeɪmə, nəʊˈiːmə| Pl. noemata |nəʊˈiːmətə|. [ad. Gr. νόηµα thought.] A term first used by Husserl for that which is perceived or thought as the self experiences it. (See quot. 1966.)
1931W. R. B. Gibson tr. Husserl's Ideas iii. iii. §88. 258 Corresponding at all points to the manifold data of the real (reellen) noetic content, there is a variety of data displayable in really pure (wirklich reiner) intuition, and in a correlative ‘noematic content’, or briefly ‘noema’—terms which we shall henceforth be continually using. 1957B. Lonergan Insight p. xxv, The noêma or intentio intenta or pensée pensée, illustrated by the lower contexts, P, Q, R,{ddd}and by the upper context that is Gödel's theorem. 1966A. Gurwitsch Stud. Phenomenology & Psychol. vii. 132 What has just been described by these allusions is the noema of perception—namely the object just (exactly so and only so) as the perceiving subject is aware of it. Ibid. 133 Noemata are not to be found in perceptual life alone. There is a noema corresponding to every act of memory, expectation, representation, [etc.]. 1972H. Dreyfus in L. Embree Life-World & Consciousness 138 If the noema were an abstract entity, we could indeed reflect on the higher order noemata involved in reflecting on the first-order noema. |