Abstract
Adult education has long sought to foster democratic engagement across difference, yet transformative learning theory lacks a phenomenological account of how respect emerges in intersubjective encounters. This article addresses that gap by introducing “genuine encountering”: a micro-level experience in which another's dignity is directly and immediately perceived, suspending habitual conceptual processing. We identify its phenomenological core—“wit(h)nessing dignity of the other”—as four converging elements: unselfing, heightened awareness, compelled recognition, and unintentional co-creation. Through four case studies, we demonstrate how these experiences vary along a spectrum from respect-intensifying to respect-initiating encounters. This phenomenological description refines transformative learning's conceptual apparatus: all genuine encounters are phenomenologically critical, while only those conflicting with existing frames generate disorienting dilemmas on the cognitive level. By grounding intersubjectivity in lived experience, the study offers educators a precise vocabulary for recognizing the micro-moments where respect is engendered and on which democratic learning depends.
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