Purpose This paper aims to clarify how researchers can develop and name themes that remain faithful to the Husserlian descriptive phenomenological tradition and to provide concrete, practice-oriented principles for rigorous phenomenological thematization. Design/methodology/approach General review. This is a methodological discussion paper drawing on Husserlian phenomenology and established descriptive methods (Giorgi, Colaizzi and Moustakas). A purposive literature synthesis (2000–2025) was conducted to examine how “themes” are conceptualised across qualitative traditions. Through comparative analysis, the paper evaluates the suitability of general thematic-analysis procedures for descriptive phenomenology and integrates them into a coherent, eidetic framework. Findings The analysis demonstrates that theme development in descriptive phenomenology is a reductive, eidetic practice rather than a coding-driven categorisation process. Findings show that linguistic precision, participant-centred phrasing and explicit engagement with epoché and imaginative variation are essential for producing themes that reflect invariant experiential structures. The paper outlines seven best-practice principles for naming themes and differentiates descriptive phenomenological themes from interpretive or hermeneutic formulations. Research limitations/implications The review is purposive rather than systematic and is conceptual rather than empirical. Future studies should empirically test the proposed naming and validation procedures and compare their application across phenomenological traditions. Practical implications The paper offers concrete tools for novice and experienced researchers, peer reviewers and editors to enhance transparency and descriptive fidelity in phenomenological reporting. Originality/value This paper offers one of the first coherent, descriptive phenomenology-specific guidelines for developing and naming themes, providing a philosophically robust alternative to generic thematic naming.
Abraham et al. (Thu,) studied this question.