The Incorporated Self: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on EmbodimentMichael O'Donovan-Anderson The Incorporated Self demonstrates that although embodiment has long been a central concern of the theoretical humanities, embodiment's potential to alter epistemology and open up new areas of non-dualistic inquiry has not been pursued far enough. This anthology collects the works of scholars from a broad range of disciplines, each examining the nature of the body and the necessity of embodiment to the human experience--for our self awareness, sense of identity, and the workings of the mind. The essays offer a sustained attack on Cartesian dualism and methodological positivism. The Incorporated Self is suitable for undergraduate and graduate seminars on mind-body relations, the psychology of perception, the nature of thought, and questions of social, political, and individual identity. This interdisciplinary book is an important work for philosophers, literary theorists, historians, sociologists and psychologists. |
From inside the book
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... object - surfaces , leading directly to an epistemic shallowness whereby knowledge is limited to and / or grounded in the obvious . This by no means implies a history of complacence in the face of skepticism , but our collective refusal ...
... object - surfaces , leading directly to an epistemic shallowness whereby knowledge is limited to and / or grounded in the obvious . This by no means implies a history of complacence in the face of skepticism , but our collective refusal ...
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... object of the gaze . 4 E.g. , " Awareness ceased to be demanded when we gave up trying to justify our knowledge of the external world by rational reconstruction . What to count as observation can now be settled in terms of the ...
... object of the gaze . 4 E.g. , " Awareness ceased to be demanded when we gave up trying to justify our knowledge of the external world by rational reconstruction . What to count as observation can now be settled in terms of the ...
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Contents
Darwinian Bodies Against Institutionalized Metaphysical Dualism | 11 |
The Ghost of Embodiment Is the Body a Natural or a Cultural Entity? | 23 |
Phantoms Lost Limbs and the Limits of the BodySelf | 47 |
Identity and the Subject in Performance Body Self and Social World | 65 |
What Meaning in Her Breast? Ambivalence of the Body as Sign and Site of Identity in Beloved and The Woman Warrior | 77 |
Hamlet Nietzsche and Visceral Knowledge | 93 |
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Common terms and phrases
action activity aesthetic language amputation analogical apperception animal Aristotle behavior biological bodily body's brain breasts Cartesian materialism cognitive science conception consciousness constituted Damasio Darwin Darwinian body Dedlow Dennett Descartes Embodied Mind emotion enactive entities epistemic epistemology essay ethereal body everyday existence experience expression Fa MuLan feeling felt context feminist flesh Freud Friedrich Nietzsche gender ghost Hamlet human Ibid idea identity interaction J. J. Gibson Kingston's knowledge lesbian lived body Maurice Merleau-Ponty meaning mental Merleau-Ponty metaphor metaphysical mimetic Morrison MuLan Nietzsche nonhuman object one's particular performance theory phantom limb Phenomenology of Perception philosophy physical physiognomic physiognomic perception play practice present psychical question reality relation relationship representation Routledge schema scientific sensation sense sensual Sethe Sethe's sexual Sigmund Freud skepticism skill social specific story structure swimming symbolic symptoms taste theatre theoretical things Toni Morrison trans truth University Press woman warrior York
References to this book
Revisioning Transpersonal Theory: A Participatory Vision of Human Spirituality Jorge N. Ferrer No preview available - 2001 |