Is the body represented in everyday bodily activities?

Luis Alejandro Murillo Lara

pp. 591-604

There seem to be good reasons to think that there must be body representations or some kind of body content required for riding a bike or grabbing a cup of coffee. However, when I ride a bike or grab a cup of coffee, am I just representing the bike and the cup? Or am I actually also representing my body and bodily movements? The thesis of this paper is that the body not only figures in the content that guides everyday activities but that it must. How is this possible? Exactly what elements of the subject's body can be said to figure in this content? I will proceed in three steps: in the first, I bring together the conceptual resources that seem to be required; in the second, I discuss a couple of proposals about how to link the notion of affordance and the topic of bodily representations, arguing that they are misguided; finally, I propose a view according to which the body's physical and spatial properties are an unavoidable part of the content that guides everyday activities.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11097-017-9535-x

Full citation:

Murillo Lara, L.A. (2018). Is the body represented in everyday bodily activities?. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 17 (3), pp. 591-604.

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