The body as a limit of phenomenology

Authors

  • Martin Ritter UFAR FF UK

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26806/fd.v5i1.118

Keywords:

tělo, já, Husserl, Merleau-Ponty

Abstract

The study interprets two phenomenological approaches to the body and underlines their weak points. More attention is dedicated to Husserl’s explication of the body in Ideas II: particularly on the basis of his theory of “localization“ we try to show that Husserl underestimates the extensionality of the body. Merleau-Ponty’s concept in Phenomenology of Perception is then interpreted as such an approach to the body that reduces it to an impersonal skill of our (bodily) actions. Our conclusion is that phenomenology cannot conceive the body as a principle of appearing, the constitutive role of which it might articulate through an analysis of experience, but instead it should respect it as an “area“ of the un-apparent that manifests itself autonomously in experience.

Published

2013-08-09

Issue

Section

Articles