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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Journal | Volume | Article

143182

The body in action

Thor Grünbaum

pp. 243-261

Abstract

This article is about how to describe an agent's awareness of her bodily movements when she is aware of executing an action for a reason. Against current orthodoxy, I want to defend the claim that the agent's experience of moving has an epistemic place in the agent's awareness of her own intentional action. In "The problem," I describe why this should be thought to be problematic. In "Motives for denying epistemic role," I state some of the main motives for denying that bodily awareness has any epistemic role to play in the content of the agent's awareness of her own action. In "Kinaesthetic awareness and control," I sketch how I think the experience of moving and the bodily sense of agency or control are best described. On this background, I move on to present, in "Arguments for epistemic role," three arguments in favour of the claim that normally the experience of moving is epistemically important to one's awareness of acting intentionally. In the final "Concluding remarks," I round off by raising some of the worries that motivated the denial of my claim in the first place.

Publication details

Published in:

(2008) Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 7 (2).

Pages: 243-261

DOI: 10.1007/s11097-007-9072-0

Full citation:

Grünbaum Thor (2008) „The body in action“. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 7 (2), 243–261.