Article by Ezequiel Di Paolo in Phenomenology and Cognitive Sciences (2020). The abstract:
"The enactive approach provides a perspective on human bodies in their
organic, sensorimotor, social, and linguistic dimensions, but many
fundamental issues still remain unaddressed. A crucial desideratum for a
theory of human bodies is that it be able to account for concrete human
becoming. In this article I show that enactive theory possesses
resources to achieve this goal. Being an existential structure, human
becoming is best approached by a series of progressive formal
indications. I discuss three standpoints on human becoming as open,
indeterminate, and therefore historical using the voices of Pico della
Mirandola, Gordon W. Allport, and Paulo Freire. Drawing on Gilbert
Simondon’s philosophy of individuation we move from an existential to an
ontological register in looking at modes of embodied becoming. His
scheme of interpretation of the relation between modes of individuation
allows us to understand human becoming in terms of a tendency to
neotenization. I compare this ontology with an enactive theoretical
account of the dimensions of embodiment, finding several compatibilities
and complementarities. Various forms of bodily unfinishedness in
enaction fit the Simondonian ontology and the existential analysis,
where transindividuality corresponds to participatory sense-making and
Freire’s joint becoming of individuals and communities correlates
with the open tensions in linguistic bodies between incorporation and
incarnation of linguistic acts. I test some of this ideas by considering
the plausibility of artificial bodies and personal becoming from an
enactive perspective, using the case of replicants in the film Blade Runner.
The conclusion is that any kind of personhood, replicants included,
requires living through an actual history of concrete becoming."
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