Meaning and embodiment: human corporeity in Hegel's anthropology

Albany: SUNY Press (2019)
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Abstract

Examines Hegel’s insights regarding the complexity and significance of embodiment in human life, identity, and experience. Meaning and Embodiment provides a detailed study of Hegel’s anthropology to examine the place of corporeity or embodiment in human life, identity, and experience. In Hegel’s view, to be human means in part to produce one’s own spiritual embodiment in culture and habits. Whereas for animals nature only has meaning relative to biological drives, humans experience meaning in a way that transcends these limits, and which allows for aesthetic appreciation of beauty and sublimity, nihilistic feelings of meaninglessness, and the complex and different systems of symbolic speech and action characterizing language and culture. By elucidating the different forms of embodiment, Nicholas Mowad shows how for Hegel we are embodied in several different ways at once: as extended, subject to physical-chemical forces, living, and human. Many difficult problems in philosophy and everyday experience come down to using the right concept of embodiment. Mowad traces Hegel’s account through the growth and development of the body, gender and racial difference, cycles of sleep and waking, and sensibility and mental illness. “This book offers a lucid explanation of very difficult Hegelian concepts in clear language, along with a passionate, searing, provocative, and intelligent foray into questions of race and gender.” — Lydia Moland, Colby College.

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Nicholas Mowad
Chandler-Gilbert Community College

Citations of this work

Hegel, Selbstischkeit, and the experiential self.Paul R. Matthews - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
Books of Interest.Michael Kennedy & Mark Schaukowitch - 2020 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 53 (1):104-110.

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References found in this work

The Visible and the Invisible: Followed by Working Notes.Maurice Merleau-Ponty - 1968 - Evanston [Ill.]: Northwestern University Press. Edited by Claude Lefort.
Eye and Mind.Maurice Merleau-Ponty - 1964 - In The Primacy of Perception. [Evanston, Ill.]: Northwestern University Press. pp. 159-190.
Exaptation–A missing term in the science of form.Stephen Jay Gould & Elisabeth S. Vrba - 1998 - In David L. Hull & Michael Ruse, The philosophy of biology. New York: Oxford University Press.

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