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Revisiting Sartre's Ontology of Embodiment in Being and Nothingness
Author(s)
Date Issued
2011
Date Available
2014-05-27T14:35:02Z
Abstract
In Being and Nothingness (1943) Sartre includes a groundbreaking
chapter on 'the body' which treats of the body under three
headings: 'the body as being for-itself: facticity', 'the body-for-others',
and 'the third ontological dimension of the body'. Sartre's
phenomenology of the body has, in general, been neglected. In this
essay, I want to revisit Sartre's conception of embodiment. I shall argue
that Sartre, even more than Merleau-Ponty, is the phenomenologist par
excellence of the flesh (la chair) and of intersubjective intercorporeity
while emphasising that touching oneself is a merely contingent feature
and not 'the foundation for a study of corporeality'.
Type of Material
Book Chapter
Publisher
Ontos Verlag
Copyright (Published Version)
2011 Ontos Verlag
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
Part of
Vesselin Petrov (ed.). Ontological Landscapes : Recent Thought on Conceptual Interfaces between Science and Philosophy
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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2010_Revisiting_Sartre¿s_Ontology_of_Embodiment,_Moran.pdf
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Format
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