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Towards a dialectical understanding of human embodiment

Burwood, Stephen, 1959

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Abstract

[From the introduction]:
This thesis is essentially programmatic. This is not to say that it should be seen as a prolegomenon to any future metaphysics of body and mind; I can hardly claim such an exulted status for what I have to say. Rather, I am content to raise certain questions and indicate certain directions in which I believe a more systematic investigation of these issues should take us. Equally, I also hope that enough of a case can be made out here for the claim that such an investigation, if not a full-fledged prolegomenon, is essential if we are to free ourselves from a fundamental impasse in contemporary philosophy of mind. It is no exaggeration to say that Cartesianism continues to stride our thought like a colossus, informing and shaping our conceptualisations of what it is to be a subject of thought and experience, as well as our more general conceptualisations of what we take the world to be and what our relationship with it actually is. The Cartesian turn in philosophy has generally left us with a framework of binary categories in which only a divisive account of these conceptualisations is possible. This is because these Cartesian binaries are not simply oppositional but are oppositional in ways such that their terms are construed as being intrinsically autonomous and exclusionary, with a privileging of one of the terms in each case.

Citation

Burwood, S. 1. Towards a dialectical understanding of human embodiment. (Thesis). University of Hull. https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4219369

Thesis Type Thesis
Deposit Date Jun 30, 2017
Publicly Available Date Feb 23, 2023
Keywords Philosophy
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4219369
Additional Information Department of Philosophy. The University of Hull
Award Date Mar 1, 1995

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Copyright Statement
© 1995 Burwood, Stephen, 1959-. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.




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