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Chapter 8. Embodied concepts

  • Christina Bermeitinger und Markus Kiefer
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Body Memory, Metaphor and Movement
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Body Memory, Metaphor and Movement

Abstract

There is a long-standing debate within philosophy and psychology on the question whether concepts are abstract mental entities or based on reactivation of sensory and motor representations. The chapter reviews what concepts are and what they are for. The relation of concepts and semantic memory is pointed out. The classical views on conceptual representations proposing an amodal representation of concepts are contrasted with recent embodiment theories, which assume that concepts are essentially grounded in perception and action. Different sources of evidence from behavioral psychology and neuropsychology foster the view that concepts are represented in the sensory and motor systems. We attempt an integration of embodied and classical views on conceptual representation and discuss embodied processes in related areas of cognitive psychology.

Abstract

There is a long-standing debate within philosophy and psychology on the question whether concepts are abstract mental entities or based on reactivation of sensory and motor representations. The chapter reviews what concepts are and what they are for. The relation of concepts and semantic memory is pointed out. The classical views on conceptual representations proposing an amodal representation of concepts are contrasted with recent embodiment theories, which assume that concepts are essentially grounded in perception and action. Different sources of evidence from behavioral psychology and neuropsychology foster the view that concepts are represented in the sensory and motor systems. We attempt an integration of embodied and classical views on conceptual representation and discuss embodied processes in related areas of cognitive psychology.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Introduction 1
  4. Part I. Contributions from phenomenology
  5. Chapter 1. The phenomenology of body memory 9
  6. Chapter 2. Body memory and the genesis of meaning 23
  7. Chapter 3. Kinesthetic memory 43
  8. Chapter 4. Comment on Thomas Fuchs 73
  9. Chapter 5. Enduring 83
  10. Chapter 6. Body memory and dance 105
  11. Part II. Contributions from cognitive sciences
  12. Chapter 7. Implicit body memory 115
  13. Chapter 8. Embodied concepts 121
  14. Chapter 9. Cognitive perspectives on embodiment 141
  15. Chapter 10. Dynamic embodiment and its functional role 155
  16. Chapter 11. Testing Fuchs’ taxonomy of body memory 171
  17. Chapter 12. Metaphorical instruction and body memory 187
  18. Chapter 13. Body memory and the emergence of metaphor in movement and speech 201
  19. Chapter 14. Moved by God 227
  20. Chapter 15. The memory of the cell 243
  21. Part III. Contributions from embodied therapies
  22. Chapter 16. Sensation, movement, and emotion 255
  23. Chapter 17. Memory, metaphor, and mirroring in movement therapy with trauma patients 267
  24. Chapter 18. Body memory as a part of the body image 289
  25. Chapter 19. The embodied word 307
  26. Chapter 20. Emotorics 327
  27. Chapter 21. The emergence of body memory in Authentic Movement 341
  28. Chapter 22. Nakedness, hunger, hooks and hearts 353
  29. Chapter 23. Dance/movement therapy with traumatized dissociative patients 369
  30. Chapter 24. Focusing, felt sensing and body memory 387
  31. Chapter 25. Mindfulness, embodiment, and depression 393
  32. Part IV. Conclusions
  33. Chapter 26. Body memory 417
  34. Authors notes 445
  35. Addresses for correspondence 453
  36. Index 459
Heruntergeladen am 30.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1075/aicr.84.11ber/html
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