In light of my ongoing review of Thompson's latest book, I was re-reading this today from Lakoff and Johnson's Philosophy in the Flesh
(pp. 4-6), and it seems like a good place to interject some excerpts,
as they are in line with Thompson's naturalistic neurophenomenology:
"Reason is not 'universal' in the transcendent sense; that is, it is
not part of the structure of the universe. It is universal, however, in
that it is a capacity shared universally by all human beings. What
allows it to be shared are the commonalities that exist in the way our
minds are embodied.
"The phenomenological person, who through
phenomenological introspection alone can discover everything there is to
know about the mind and the nature of experience, is a fiction.
Although we can have a theory of a vast, rapidly and automatically
operating cognitive unconscious, we have no direct conscious access to
its operation and therefore to most of our thought. Phenomenological
reflection, though valuable in revealing the structure of experience,
must be supplemented by empirical research into the cognitive
unconscious.
"There is no poststructuralist person—no
completely decentered subject for whom all meaning is arbitrary, totally
relative and purely historical contingent, unconstrained by body and
brain. The mind is not merely embodied, but embodied in such a way that
our conceptual systems draw largely upon the commonalities of our bodies
and of the environments we live in. The result is that much of a
person’s conceptual system is either universal or widespread across
languages and cultures. Our conceptual systems are not totally relative
and not merely a matter of historical contingency, even though a degree
of conceptual relativity does exist and even though historical
contingency does matter a great deal. The grounding of our conceptual
systems in shared embodied and bodily experience creates a largely
centered self, but not a monolithic self.
"There exists no
Fregean person--as posed by analytic philosophy--for whom thought has
been extruded from the body. That is, there is no real person whose
embodiment plays no role in meaning, whose meaning is purely objective
and defined by the external world, and whose language can fit the
external world with no significant role played by mind, brain, or body.
Because our conceptual systems grow out of our bodies, meaning is
grounded in and through our bodies. Because a vast range of our concepts
are metaphorical, meaning is not entirely literal and the classical
correspondence theory of truth is false. The correspondence theory holds
that statements are true or false objectively, depending on how they
map directly onto the world--independent of any human understanding of
either the statement or the world. On the contrary, truth is mediated by
embodied understanding and imagination. That does not mean that truth
is purely subjective or that there is no stable truth. Rather, our
common embodiment allows for common, stable truths."
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