Merleau-Ponty's Phenomenological Itinerary From Body Schema to Situated Knowledge

Janus Head 9 (2):525-550 (2007)
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Abstract

This paper addresses a number of issues concerning both the status of phenomenology in the work of one of its classical expositors, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and the general relation between theoretical models and evidence in phenomenological accounts. In so doing, I will attempt to explain Merleau-Ponty's departure from classical transcendental accounts in Husserl's thought and why Merleau-Ponty increasingly elaborated on them through aesthetic rationality. The result is a phenomenology that no longer understands itself as foundational and no longer understands itself in the strict opposition of intuition and concept. Rather both emerge from an operative experience generated in the exchange between situated embodied knowing and historical knowledge.

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Dynamic Models of Body Schematic Processes.Shaun Gallagher - 2005 - In Helena de Preester & Veroniek Knockaert (eds.), Body image and body schema. John Benjamins.

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