Philosophy in the flesh

the embodied mind and its challenge to Western thought

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August 23, 2020 | History

Philosophy in the flesh

the embodied mind and its challenge to Western thought

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What are human beings like? How is knowledge possible? What is truth? Where do moral values come from? Questions like these have stood at the center of Western philosophy for centuries. In addressing them, philosophers have made certain fundamental assumptions-that we can know our own minds by introspection, that most of our thinking about the world is literal, and that reason is disembodied and universal-that are now called into question by well-established results of cognitive science. It has been shown empirically that: Most thought is unconscious. We have no direct conscious access to the mechanisms of thought and language. Our ideas go by too quickly and at too deep a level for us to observe them in any simple way. Abstract concepts are mostly metaphorical. Much of the subject matter of philosophy, such as the nature of time, morality, causation, the mind, and the self, relies heavily on basic metaphors derived from bodily experience. What is literal in our reasoning about such concepts is minimal and conceptually impoverished. All the richness comes from metaphor. For instance, we have two mutually incompatible metaphors for time, both of which represent it as movement through space: in one it is a flow past us and in the other a spatial dimension we move along. Mind is embodied. Thought requires a body-not in the trivial sense that you need a physical brain to think with, but in the profound sense that the very structure of our thoughts comes from the nature of the body. Nearly all of our unconscious metaphors are based on common bodily experiences. Most of the central themes of the Western philosophical tradition are called into question by these findings. The Cartesian person, with a mind wholly separate from the body, does not exist. The Kantian person, capable of moral action according to the dictates of a universal reason, does not exist. The phenomenological person, capable of knowing his or her mind entirely through introspection alone, does not exist. The utilitarian person, the Chomskian person, the poststructuralist person, the computational person, and the person defined by analytic philosophy all do not exist. Then what does? Lakoff and Johnson show that a philosophy responsible to the science of mind offers radically new and detailed understandings of what a person is. After first describing the philosophical stance that must follow from taking cognitive science seriously, they re-examine the basic concepts of the mind, time, causation, morality, and the self: then they rethink a host of philosophical traditions, from the classical Greeks through Kantian morality through modern analytic philosophy. They reveal the metaphorical structure underlying each mode of thought and show how the metaphysics of each theory flows from its metaphors. Finally, they take on two major issues of twentieth-century philosophy: how we conceive rationality, and how we conceive language.

Publish Date
Publisher
Basic Books
Language
English
Pages
624

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Previews available in: English

Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 584-601) and index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
128
Library of Congress
BD418.3 .L35 1999

The Physical Object

Pagination
xiv, 624 p. ;
Number of pages
624

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL375255M
Internet Archive
philosophyinfles00lako
ISBN 10
0465056733
LCCN
98037113
OCLC/WorldCat
39837796
Library Thing
45956
Goodreads
1689823

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
August 23, 2020 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
August 15, 2020 Edited by jellybeanette Added synopsis
March 2, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
August 11, 2011 Edited by ImportBot import new book
December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page