1985
DOI: 10.5840/heideggercircle1985199
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How Heidegger Moves

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“…Embodiment refers to the notion that “ all human perception is phenomenologically experienced from within an embodied perspective, that of the lived body ” (Hersch, 2015, p. 118; original italics). Hersch’s term, which owes more to Merleau-Ponty and Sartre than Heidegger, is consistent with the views of person-centered therapists (e.g., Gendlin, 1966, Gendlin 1978–79/2006; Madison & Gendlin, 2011; Moreira, 2012) that we are ontologically body-environment interaction, and that we are always embedded in the world 7…”
Section: Six Key Features Of Human Experiencementioning
confidence: 54%
“…Embodiment refers to the notion that “ all human perception is phenomenologically experienced from within an embodied perspective, that of the lived body ” (Hersch, 2015, p. 118; original italics). Hersch’s term, which owes more to Merleau-Ponty and Sartre than Heidegger, is consistent with the views of person-centered therapists (e.g., Gendlin, 1966, Gendlin 1978–79/2006; Madison & Gendlin, 2011; Moreira, 2012) that we are ontologically body-environment interaction, and that we are always embedded in the world 7…”
Section: Six Key Features Of Human Experiencementioning
confidence: 54%