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Is the sense of bodily ownership related to pre-reflective bodily awareness? A reply to Kuhle.
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- Author(s): Gadsby, Stephen
- Source:
Philosophical Psychology. May2018, Vol. 31 Issue 4, p629-637. 9p.
- Additional Information
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- Abstract:
There are two ways in which we are aware of our bodies: reflectively, when we attend to them, and pre-reflectively, a kind of marginal awareness that pervades regular experience. However, there is an inherent issue with studying bodily awareness of the pre-reflective kind: given that it is, by definition, non-observational, how can we observe it? Kuhle claims to have found a way around this problem—we can study it indirectly by investigating an aspect of reflective bodily awareness: the sense of bodily ownership. Unfortunately, I argue, there is little reason to believe a relationship between pre-reflective bodily awareness and the sense of bodily ownership exists. Until more work is done, pre-reflective bodily awareness remains beyond our empirical grasp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Abstract:
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