Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Griffero, Tonino

Title Being a Lived Body From a Neo-Phenomenological Point of View
Published Milton : Taylor & Francis Group, 2024

Copies

Description 1 online resource (226 p.)
Series Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought Series
Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought Series
Contents Cover -- Half Title -- Series -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- 1 What is this "thing" called lived body? -- 1.1 By approximation -- 1.1.1 Where does this interest in the lived body come from? -- 1.1.2 Descartes' (or Cartesianism's?) original sin -- 1.1.3 Just a linguistic bump? -- 1.1.4 The historical repression of the lived or felt body -- 1.1.5 Why neuroscience is of no relevance here -- 1.2 Stumbling stones or cornerstones? -- 1.2.1 The body is dead: long live the Body! -- 1.2.2 Heidegger's enigmatic silence on the body (too difficult a problem!)
1.3 When (almost) everything began -- 1.3.1 Leib as the objectivation of the will -- 1.3.2 The zero point of orientation -- 1.3.3 Double sensation and sensings -- 1.3.4 Kinaesthetic sensations -- 1.3.5 Problems? My name is legion -- 1.4 The lived body leaves the desk -- 1.4.1 Do angels have a lived body? -- 1.4.2 Body and (too much) soul -- 2 "Being" and/or "having" a body -- 2.1 The phenomenological dilemma -- 2.1.1 Being rather than having (a body) -- 2.1.2 Being plus having (a body) -- 2.2 Vers le concret! The magic of the body's operative intentionality -- 2.2.1 I exist in my body
2.2.2 The body-for-itself -- 2.2.3 The body-for-others -- 2.2.4 The body-for-itself-for-others -- 2.2.5 When logic is not all that matters -- 2.3 The body's disappearance and dys-appearance -- 2.3.1 The surpassed body -- 2.3.2 Is the lived body the absent body? -- 2.4 When the body becomes flesh -- 2.4.1 Perception and movement -- 2.4.2 Incarnation and communion -- 2.4.3 Chiasma and flesh -- 2.4.4 A blunder? -- 3 The self-affection of the invisible-pathic body -- 3.1 Incarnation -- 3.2 Terra incognita: the neo-phenomenological felt body -- 3.2.1 Felt body
3.2.2 The absolute-pre-dimensional space (and the phantom limb) -- 3.2.3 Felt-bodily islands (and the body schema) -- 3.2.4 The felt-body alphabet -- 3.2.5 What is felt-bodily communication? Encorporation and excorporation -- 3.2.6 Felt-bodily "presentness" -- 3.2.7 Give unto Schmitz what belongs to Schmitz -- 3.3 The lived body as resonance -- 3.3.1 Corporeal responsiveness -- 3.3.2 The lived body as ecological resonance -- 3.3.3 The adventures of resonance -- 3.4 The felt body is a task -- 3.4.1 The felt body is the nature that we ourselves are
3.4.2 Between New Phenomenology and Somaesthetics -- 3.4.3 From a sociology of the body to a felt-bodily sociology -- Conclusion (to be continued) -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary This book begins with the distinction between the so-called 'lived body' or 'felt body' (Leib) and the 'physical body' (Körper), tracing the conceptual history of this distinction through key figures in philosophical and social thought
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781003836094
1003836097