Polizzi and Draper offer an elegant application of a phenomenological approach to the practice of psychotherapy within the forensic context. They describe how-even though these contexts are constituted through layers of sedimented meanings that pre-signify setting and participants-therapists and inmates may find ways to be open to each other and to genuine encounters that they conceptualize as "events." In this commentary, I raise a question that the authors did not appear to consider, which is that of whether these "events" have "effects" either for the participants themselves or for the broader context as well. I contrast a hermeneutic-Heideggerian approach, which does not necessarily concern itself with such effects-as they are considered irrelevant to the genuineness of the interpersonal encounter-and a transcendental Husserlian-Deleuzian approach, in which such events are thought to have profound effects for all parties involved, including the broader context.
Keywords: effects; events; intersubjectivity; transcendental reduction; transformation.