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Hi,
has anyone read Shaun Gallagher's new book,  'How the Body Shapes the
Mind'? I've only seen the web description  - copied below - but would
welcome any comments on this or Gallagher's work in general.

From http://www.oup.co.uk/:

"How the Body Shapes the Mind is an interdisciplinary work that addresses
philosophical questions by appealing to evidence found in experimental
psychology, neuroscience, studies of pathologies, and developmental
psychology. There is a growing consensus across these disciplines that the
contribution of embodiment to cognition is inescapable. Because this
insight has been developed across a variety of disciplines, however, there
is still a need to develop a common vocabulary that is capable of
integrating discussions of brain mechanisms in neuroscience, behavioural
expressions in psychology, design concerns in artificial intelligence and
robotics, and debates about embodied experience in the phenomenology and
philosophy of mind. Shaun Gallagher's book aims to contribute to the
formulation of that common vocabulary and to develop a conceptual framework
that will avoid both the overly reductionistic approaches that explain
everything in terms of bottom-up neuronal mechanisms, and inflationistic
approaches that explain everything in terms of Cartesian, top-down
cognitive states.

Gallagher pursues two basic sets of questions. The first set consists of
questions about the phenomenal aspects of the structure of experience, and
specifically the relatively regular and constant features that we find in
the content of our experience. If throughout conscious experience there is
a constant reference to one's own body, even if this is a recessive or
marginal awareness, then that reference constitutes a structural feature of
the phenomenal field of consciousness, part of a framework that is likely
to determine or influence all other aspects of experience. The second set
of questions concerns aspects of the structure of experience that are more
hidden, those that may be more difficult to get at because they happen
before we know it. They do not normally enter into the content of
experience in an explicit way, and are often inaccessible to reflective
consciousness. To what extent, and in what ways, are consciousness and
cognitive processes, which include experiences related to perception,
memory, imagination, belief, judgement, and so forth, shaped or structured
by the fact that they are embodied in this way?

Price: £35.00 (Hardback)
0-19-927194-1
Publication date: 27 January 2005
Clarendon Press 294 pages, 5 tables and numerous figures, 234mm x 156mm

Best wishes,
Adrian