Research Hub/Papers/The Importance of Phenomenology for UAP Studies
Peer-ReviewedOpen Access2025

The Importance of Phenomenology for UAP Studies

Kimberly S. Engels

Limina: The Journal of UAP Studies

Summary

Second Limina paper by Engels (first being the Engels & Hauser epistemic injustice paper already in the catalog). Argues that phenomenology - the systematic examination of first-person lived experience - is an essential methodological supplement to empirical UAP research. Key contributions include restoring the lived world as an epistemic foundation, enabling investigation beyond the extraterrestrial hypothesis, distinguishing ordinary from non-ordinary perception, and enabling intersubjective analysis of experiencer accounts. Ties directly to DECUR's experiencer research thread.

Abstract

Phenomenology as a research method involves careful examination of first-person experiences to identify what is essential to how objects appear. This approach offers important strengths for UAP research. Key advantages include restoring the lived world as a foundation for knowledge, moving beyond extraterrestrial hypotheses, exploring what is absent from discourse, and distinguishing between ordinary sensory perception and non-ordinary perception. Additionally, phenomenology enables investigation of UAP through intersubjective experiences while drawing parallels with other anomalous phenomena, making it a critical supplementary method alongside more empirical approaches.

Citation

Kimberly S. Engels. (2025). Limina: The Journal of UAP Studies. DOI: 10.59661/001c.131704

https://doi.org/10.59661/001c.131704