maurice merleau-ponty’s approach to consciousness
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Phenomenology andMaurice Merleau-Ponty’s
approach to consciousness
![Page 2: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Heidegger's hammer
Ihde's chalk (Experimental Phenomenology) ,
Merleau-Ponty's gun
Kay's tennis racket
![Page 3: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
"All consciousness is perceptual...The perceived world is the always presupposed foundation
of all rationality, all value and all existence."
![Page 4: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
From Heidegger to Merleau-PontyBODY AND TIME
Developing Heidegger’s notion of Dasein as being-in-
the-world, Merleau-Ponty emphasises the being of
Dasein as its bodily comportment and declares the
body an essentially intentional part of the subject.
Since Merleau-Ponty wants to make the body itself
intentional, it is no surprise that he intertwines time
and the subject, (in)famously remarking that “we
must understand time as the subject and the subject
as time” (Merleau-Ponty 1945).
![Page 5: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Merleau-Ponty’s Experience - Knowledge
• ...lived experience is prior to abstract reflection; it is pre-thematic.
• We live it, but don’t explicitly think about and calculate what we are doing.
![Page 6: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Merleau-Ponty’s Experience - Knowledge
• When I am most typically engaged in a task, I do not reflect on the task, and this mode of ready-
to-hand engagement is the primordial, experiential ground which makes reflection
posble.
• Whenever we reflect intellectually on experience, we have to go back to the lived world of our
experience prior to that reflection.
![Page 7: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Unconscious – conscious
the unconscious:
• can be viewed as the pre-thematic, pre-objective, lived, concrete, latent experience of our engagement with
the world (with others and alongside things) prior to reflection.
• It is what we live out but do not speak or think. When we thematizeit, bring it to reflection, we make it
thematic or “conscious.”
![Page 8: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
• ...our history becomes “sedimented” in our bodily gestures, contained there as latent and unreflected upon even though it is meaningful and lived out in the world.
• To make these meanings thematic and subject to reflection is the process of, in a sense, making the “unconscious” “conscious”–or making the pre-thematic thematic.
Unconscious – conscious
![Page 9: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Maurice Merleau-PontyFrench philosopher (1908-61)
Major influencer: Edmund Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre
Related videos:
Hubert Dreyfus on Embodiment (I-II): 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99iTDUcBuRQ 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhrGTrj4DOI&feature=response_watch
![Page 10: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
• The concept of body-subject
as an alternative to Descartes’ ‘cogito’: critique of objective thought.
• The world is not merely an extension of our own minds.....
Merleau-Ponty’s Body-Mind
![Page 11: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
• Our perception ends in objects....
• phenomenal thing is not the unchanging object of the natural sciences, but a correlate of our body and its sensori-motor functions.
body cannot be viewed solely as an object, or material entity of the world.
![Page 12: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
• Instead Husserl’s suggestion ‘all consciousness is consciousness of something’,
he proposes: ‘all consciousness is perceptual consciousness’
• PERCEPTION: primordial openness and not as Locke claimed a product of sensation
• Embodied inherence is more fundamental than our reflective capacities.
Primacy of Perception
![Page 13: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
There is no lived distinction between the act of perceiving and the thing perceived.
Re-examines the interrelation between
acts of thought intentional objects of thought
noesis noema
Action of the body subject Perception of body subject
![Page 14: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
• Body is not only an object but a perceptual openness to the world.
• The primacy of perception signifies a primacy of experience, so to speak, insofar as perception becomes an active and constitutive dimension
an active dimension, in that it is a primordial openness to the life world
Primacy of Perception
![Page 15: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Perceiving mind is an incarnated body, or to put the problem in another way, he (M-P.) enriches the concept of the body to allow it to both think and perceive. It is also for these reasons that we are best served by referring to the individual as not simply a body, but as a body-subject.
‘Inter-individual': physically embodied
Consciousness : intentionality of the body
Body-subject: Thinking Body
![Page 16: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Body-Consciousness
• Our motility, that is, our capability of bodily movement, testifies that the body cannot be the mere servant of consciousness, since
"in order that we may be able to move our body towards an object, the object must first exist for it, our body must not belong to the realm of the in-itself"
![Page 17: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
PERCEPTION: involves the perceiving subject in a situation, rather than positioning them as a spectator who has somehow abstracted themselves from the situation
• There is hence an interconnection of action and perception
"every perceptual habituality is still a motor habit"
![Page 18: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
"Inside and outside are inseparable. The world is
wholly inside and I am wholly outside myself“
Perception is not grounded in either an objective or subjective component (for example, it is not objectively received before a subjective interpretation), but by a reciprocal openness which resides between such categories.
relationship between perceiving subject ~ object
perceived
![Page 19: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Body Perception
• aspects of an object revealed to an individual are dependent upon their bodily position.
• "the presentation of objects in perspective cannot be understood except through the resistance of my body to all variation of perspective"
![Page 20: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Perceiving our own Body
• we are not accorded quite the same privilege in viewing our own bodies, as we have in viewing other 'objects'.
• ‘the reflection of the body upon itself always miscarries at the last minute’
• Mirror: is always mediated by body image
![Page 21: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Body as means of Communication
body should be conceived of as our means of communication with the world, rather than merely as an object of the world which our transcendent mind orders to perform varying functions.
![Page 22: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
• Touching ~ Being touched: ‘If I touch with my left hand my right hand while it touches an object, the right hand object is not the right hand touching: the first is an intertwining of bones, muscles and flesh bearing down on a point in space, the second traverses space as a rocket in order to discover the exterior object in its place’
Body as means of Communication
![Page 23: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
There is then, a gap (ecart in French) between
ourselves as touching and ourselves as touched,
• "I can identify the hand touched in the same one which will in a moment be touching... In this bundle of bones and muscles which my right hand presents to my left, I can anticipate for an instant the incarnation of that other right hand, alive and mobile, which I thrust towards things in order to explore them. The body tries... to touch itself while being touched and initiates a kind of reversible reflection"
![Page 24: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
-this image of our left hand touching our right hand does more than merely represent the body's capacity to be both perceiving object and subject of perception in a constant oscillation
Our embodied subjectivity is never located purely in either our tangibility or in our touching, but in the intertwining of these two aspects, or where the two lines of a chiasm intersect with one another...
![Page 25: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
Merleau-Ponty: Chiasm/Flesh
• mind and body the perceptual faith and its articulation , subject and object, self and world , as well as many other related dualisms, are all associated chiasmically.
• he terms this interdependence of these various different notions the flesh.
• ‘because between my body looked at and my body looking, my body touched and my body touching, there is overlapping or encroachment, so that we may say that the things pass into us, as well as we into the things’
![Page 26: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
The legacy of Merleau-Ponty’s work• He says that scientific points of view: "always both naive and at the same time
dishonest" ...
• Critiqued Cognitivism (scientific and computational approaches of mind)
Current applications:
cognitive science's + phenomenology
Scholars: Andy Clark, Alva Noë, Shaun Gallagher
Neurophenomenology: 1991 of The Embodied Mind by Francisco Varela, Evan Thompson, and Eleanor Rosch
![Page 27: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Readings
• Merleau-Ponty, M. Phenomenology of Perception. Trans. C. Smith. New York: Routledge & Keegan Paul Ltd, 1962.
• Merleau-Ponty, M. The Visible and the Invisible. Trans. A. Lingis. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1969.
![Page 28: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
Books:
The Phantom Limb Phenomenon (1978), Douglas B. Price and Neil J. Twombly
V. S. Ramachandran Phantoms in the Brain
![Page 29: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s approach to consciousness](https://reader033.vdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052504/54c77fe74a795934358b4574/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Technology + Body-Mind + Embodiment + Experience