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Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind$
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David Woodruff Smith and Amie L. Thomasson

Print publication date: 2005

Print ISBN-13: 9780199272457

Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2010

DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199272457.001.0001

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The Phenomenology of Bodily Awareness *

The Phenomenology of Bodily Awareness *

Chapter:
(p.295) 14 The Phenomenology of Bodily Awareness *
Source:
Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind
Author(s):

José Luis Bermúdez (Contributor Webpage)

Publisher:
Oxford University Press
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199272457.003.0015

This chapter explores the dialectic between discussions of bodily awareness in the phenomenological tradition and in contemporary philosophy of mind and scientific psychology. It shows, with particular reference to Merleau–Ponty's Phenomenology of Perception, how phenomenological insights into bodily awareness and its role in agency can be developed and illuminated by research into somatic proprioception and motor control. The chapter presents a taxonomy of different types and levels of bodily awareness, and a model of the spatiality of bodily awareness that explains some of the fundamental differences that Merleau–Ponty identified between our experience of our bodies and our experience of non-bodily objects. The key to these differences is that bodily locations are given on a non-Cartesian frame of reference. The final section shows how this way of thinking about the phenomenology of bodily awareness has interesting and fruitful connections with current thinking about motor control.

Keywords:   bodily awareness, proprioception, frames of reference, motor control

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