Part I.: From
Embodiment to Action
1. Embodiment
A well known concept:
'en
+ BODY + ment'
(ca.
into + body + fication, i.e. putting the mind into a body, giving a body to
the mind etc)
One direction:
subjective experience and 'being-in-the-world'
Varela Thompson and Rosch
M. Merleu-Ponty
E. Husserl,
M. Heidegger
phenomenology
, "Lebensphilsophie", Existentialism
A more scientific direction:
robotics
intelligence without representation,
Brooks (1991)
linguistics
Lakoff, Johnson and the metaphorical
meaning of concepts
2. Biology of Embodied Cognition
So far, we treated embodiment from a linguistic, control, representation
perspective
(maybe indirectly based on biology). Making the link direct, from a biological
perspective, however, the phenomenon of embodiment reveals a lot more:
typical
minds are those of animals
animal
(and - qua evolution! - most of human) cognitition is pre-linguistic
organismic
knowledge is relative to the autonomous body, inseparable
from it
Two
powerful illustrations for biol.emb.:
relationship
of switch to network
(i.e. gene to the organism
- cf. human genome project!)
or take
the "blind flight"
metaphor H. Maturana 1980
(Lettvin etc: the frog's eye)
These metaphors may explain the extension of the role the body has
in the mind, which goes way beyond what could be suspected
from the Lakoff et al linguistic examples. We can amplify this even
further by looking into the details of organismic embodiment.
3. Developmental Psychology (a very brief note)
The inseparability of the
mental content from bodily properties is dramatically proven
by several recent findings in developmental psychology.
For instance,
Thelen et al. show how to obtain concepts
by own body actions, the example is "force".
In a nutshell: if you cant move, you will have no words.
Thelen, E. (1995). Time-scale dynamics and the development
of an embodied cognition.
In R. F. Port & T. Van Gelder (1995). Mind as motion. Exploratiuon
in the dynammics of cognitioin. (pp. 69-100).
Cambridge, MA: Bradford Book/MIT Press.
Thelen, E., Schöner, G., Scheier, C. & Smith, L., B. (2001)
The Dynamics of Embodiment: A Field Theory of Infant Perseverative
Reaching.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 24, 1-86
http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/bbs/Archive/bbs.thelen.html
That is, not only the body as such, but the
activity of the body is in the focus of mind.
5. Activity and Agency as Basis of Knowledge
Causal feratures of the body, of course.
In the theory of knowledge, a contemplative view of knowledge
has dominated so far,
cf Mach's Analyse der
Empfindungen
, where the mind was understood as a passive
recipient and interpreter of independent external
inputs.
The right view of embodiment supports an opposite, (
again
, Baconian
), view.
We could stop to clarify this briefly
Active vs passive mind: problem of realism
if the
mind (or whole organism) contributes,
then do we have bias? error?
is knowledge unreal?
But note that activity is not some kind of
additive element
it's not some kind of knowledge
but something which has a different nature:
not knowledge but action that leads to knowledge
in philosophical jargon: not representative but performative
Summary of Part I.
- mind is biologically embodied
- the closer meaning is (body) action
- (actions are performed by agents, so)
- this means that agency forms the basis of all knowledge
Some consequences:
scientific
knowledge is not about an 'outside world' but about a 'complex'
of which
the organism is a part.
philo I.
there can be no doubt about actions and activity
cf definition
of knowledge, foundationalism, Gettier problem
(now that's no more a question of philosophy but physiology)
philo II.
no difference between inside (mental) and outside (body, world..)