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Enaction: Embodied Cognition

Francisco J. Varela, Evan Thompson, Eleanor Rosch

The Embodied Mind January 13, 2017 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.7551/mitpress/9780262529365.003.0008

Summary

Cognition depends on having a body with sensorimotor capacities, which are embedded in biological, psychological, and cultural contexts. Perception and action are fundamentally inseparable, having evolved together. The enactive approach holds that perception consists of perceptually guided action and that cognitive structures emerge from recurrent sensorimotor patterns that enable such guidance.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Cognition is embodied and enactive, meaning it depends on bodily experience and that perception and action are inseparable, with cognitive structures arising from sensorimotor patterns.

Abstract

This chapter explains embodied action. The term embodied highlights two points: first, that cognition depends upon the kinds of experience that come from having a body with various sensorimotor capacities, and second, that these individual sensorimotor capacities are themselves embedded in a more encompassing biological, psychological, and cultural context. The term action emphasizes that sensory and motor processes, perception and action, are fundamentally inseparable in lived cognition. Indeed, the two are not merely contingently linked in individuals; they have also evolved together. The chapter then discusses enaction. In a nutshell, the enactive approach consists of two points: (1) perception consists in perceptually guided action and (2) cognitive structures emerge from the recurrent sensorimotor patterns that enable action to be perceptually guided.

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