different between phenomenally vs phenomenologically

phenomenally

English

Alternative forms

  • phænomenally (rare)

Etymology

phenomenal +? -ly

Adverb

phenomenally (comparative more phenomenally, superlative most phenomenally)

  1. In a manner that is extraordinary or amazing.
    The tennis player's serve was phenomenally fast.
  2. In terms of phenomena.
    • 2014, Berit Brogard, Does Perception Have Content? (page 97)
      The 'old-look' and the 'bald-pink-and-wrinkled-look' are, in this context at least, one and the same. Phenomenally speaking, that is, the predicates 'old' and 'bald, pink, and wrinkled' here are equivalent […]

Synonyms

  • extraordinarily, prodigiously, remarkably

Related terms

  • phenomenal
  • phenomenalism
  • phenomenalistic
  • phenomenology
  • phenomenon

Translations

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phenomenologically

English

Etymology

phenomenological +? -ly

Adverb

phenomenologically (not comparable)

  1. (philosophy) In a manner characteristic of phenomenology or of phenomenological philosophy.
    • 1969, Joseph Margolis, "Existential Import and Perceptual Judgments," The Journal of Philosophy, vol. 66, no. 13, p. 404,
      There is no question that, phenomenologically considered, the experience of perceiving and the experience of having a hallucination are sufficiently similar that, on the strength of what proves to be a hallucination, one may sincerely claim to have (veridically) perceived something.

Translations

phenomenologically From the web:

  • what does phenomenological mean
  • what is phenomenological closest to you
  • what is the meaning of phenomenological
  • what is phenomenological
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