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Partir de l’« expérience vécue » pour comprendre l’activité humaine

Géraldine Rix-lièvre, Béatrice Cahour, Julien Guibourdenche

Revue d'anthropologie des connaissances April 15, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.4000/rac.32271 via DOAJ

Summary

This introductory article situates the study of lived experience within situated, embodied, and distributed approaches to cognition. It reviews the history of methods for investigating lived experience, the articulation of intrinsic and extrinsic perspectives, and different levels of description of activity. It presents the thematic issue's articles, highlighting their contribution to multi-method and multi-level articulations. The introduction shows that articulatory methodological approaches are relevant for tackling transformative issues and objects rooted in an embedded, embodied, extended, and enacted conception of cognition.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Articulatory methodological approaches are particularly relevant for tackling transformative issues and objects rooted in an embedded, embodied, extended, and enacted conception of cognition.

Abstract

This introductory article begins by situating the study of lived experience within situated, embodied and distributed approaches to cognition. It then reviews the history of the development of methods for investigating lived experience, as well as the articulation of intrinsic and extrinsic perspectives and different levels of description of activity. These positions make it possible to present the various articles in this thematic issue, highlighting their contribution to 'multi-method' and 'multi-level' articulations. Finally, this introduction shows that articulatory methodological approaches appear to be particularly relevant for tackling transformative issues and investing certain objects rooted in a embedded, embodied, extended and enacted conception of cognition.

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