Abstract

This article aims to describe the possible contributions of Edmund Husserls and Martin Heideggers philosophies to the development of a phenomenological clinic. It recognizes that Husserl, with his Phenomenological Psychology, inaugurates a psychology of subjective, which may serve as basis to the phenomenological clinic. It discusses the contributions and possible limitations of Ludwig Binswangers and Medard Boss's clinical proposals, which aim to be funded on Heideggers Analytic of the Dasein . It suggests Merleau-Pontys existential phenomenology, which retakes last Husserl's thought having as conducting wire the concept of Lebenswelt , as a fecund way to the phenomenological clinic.

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