The Embodied Descartes: Contemporary Readings of L’Homme

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Abstract

A certain reading of Descartes, which we refer to as ‘the embodied Descartes’, is emerging from recent scholarship on L’Homme, in keeping with the interpretive trend which emphasizes Descartes’s identity as a natural philosopher. This reading complicates our understanding of Descartes’s philosophical project: far from strictly separating human minds from bodies, the embodied Descartes keeps them tightly integrated, while animal bodies behave in ways quite distinct from those of other pieces of extended substance. Here, we identify three categories of embodiment in contemporary readings of Descartes’s physiology: (1) bodily health and function, (2) embodied reflex and memory, and (3) embodied cognition. All present more or less strong versions of the embodied Descartes. Together, they constitute a compelling reading of a Cartesian natural philosophy that, if not expressly antidualist, is an awfully long way from the canonical picture.

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Hutchins, B. R., Eriksen, C. B., & Wolfe, C. T. (2016). The Embodied Descartes: Contemporary Readings of L’Homme. In Studies in History and Philosophy of Science(Netherlands) (Vol. 43, pp. 287–304). Springer Science and Business Media B.V. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-46989-8_18

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