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(1971) The problem of embodiment, Dordrecht, Springer.

The theory of the body-qua-mine as mystery

Richard Zaner

pp. 21-43

The quest for an "existential indubitable," we have seen, locates one, to be sure, but it is an indubitable of a very strange type: while the explosive "j'existe!" (or: "je suis manifeste," "es erlebt in mir") bursts forth with unmistakable energy, it yet presents itself as fundamentally opaque. Being me myself as embodied by this body which is mine, I am unable to put it over against me; reflectively observing it, on the other hand, I only make thematic that very unity itself, with its intrinsic opacity. What does it mean for this physical organism to be mine? Do I "have" it like a triangle "has" three angles? Or is there some other sense to the "mine" here? Am I my body? Or, is it rather the case that "I" and "my body" are, not self-identical, but in some way "unified?" If they are not the same, but are unified, what kind of unity is it that combines this physical "stuff" with what is absolutely opposite to "stuff," namely, "me," or "mind?"

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-3014-4_2

Full citation:

Zaner, R. (1971). The theory of the body-qua-mine as mystery, in The problem of embodiment, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 21-43.

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