gerçeklik, hakîkat

listen to the pronunciation of gerçeklik, hakîkat
Türkisch - Englisch
facticity
literally the quality or state of being a fact
Philosophy: considered one's place, body, past, position, and fundamental relationship to the Other
The collection of "facts" and/or labels which are one half of a dichotomy between transcendence (of consciousness) and a person's facticity
The quality or condition of being fact
a belief in factual characteristics of real objects In phenomenology, by bracketing our    facticity,l we transfer our focus from assumed things "out there" to our experience
The collection of "facts" and/or labels which are one half of a dichotomy between transcendence (of consciousness) and a persons facticity
The contingent conditions of an individual human life In the existentialism of Heidegger and Sartre, facticity includes all of the concrete details—time and place of birth, for example, along with the prospect of death—against the background of which human freedom is to be exercized Recommended Reading: Martin Heidegger, Ontology: The Hermeneutics of Facticity, tr by John Van Buren (Indiana, 1999) {at Amazon com} and Alterity and Facticity: New Perspectives on Husserl, ed by Natalie Depraz and Dan Zahavi (Kluwer, 1998) {at Amazon com} Also see Robert Cavalier and noesis
{i} factuality, quality of being a fact
Sartre's term for those features of our past or present that we were not free to choose and yet they seem to set limits on the course of our lives
Philosophy: considered ones place, body, past, position, and fundamental relationship to the Other