Description |
1 online resource (226 p.) |
Series |
Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought Series |
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Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought Series
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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!) |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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
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ISBN |
9781003836094 |
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1003836097 |
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