Phenomenology is the study of experience from the perspective of individuals. It aims to illuminate specific phenomena through how they are perceived by people in a situation. Phenomenology involves carefully describing lived experiences through qualitative methods like interviews and observation. Edmund Husserl developed transcendental phenomenology, arguing we should study experience rather than assume knowledge from Descartes and Locke. Husserl believed we must suspend natural attitudes and reflect purely to understand phenomena as they are independent of prejudices. Phenomenology describes both the intentional processes of consciousness and the objects of consciousness. Later philosophers like Heidegger disagreed with Husserl's method, believing meaning is formed through relationships between events and people rather than detaching