ABSTRACT

This book delves into the embodied ground of thinking, illuminating the transition from theorising about the embodied mind to actively practising embodied thinking in research, teaching, and learning. The authors speak from immersing themselves in novel methods that engage the felt, experiential dimensions of cognition in inquiry.

The turn to embodiment has sparked the development of new methodologies within phenomenology, pragmatism, and cognitive science. Drawing on Eugene Gendlin’s philosophical work on felt understanding, and Francesco Varela’s enactivist approach, contributors explore innovative embodied thinking methods such as Focusing, Thinking at the Edge, micro-phenomenology, and mindfulness practices. They demonstrate the practical applications of these methods in research, teaching, and learning, highlighting their liberating and empowering potential for researchers and students. In an age marked by information overload and societal polarisation, methods of embodied thinking provide an innovative edge to critique, complementing more traditional approaches to critical thinking with listening skills and reflexive care.

This book shows how heeding the essential, yet often overlooked, embodied grounds of critical and creative thinking can deepen and strengthen each of research, teaching, and learning. It will interest philosophers of education and educators in higher education in particular, as well as researchers and postgraduate students from philosophy, and the cognitive and social sciences, who are curious about how embodied thinking can enrich research, teaching, and learning.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter 1|15 pages

The Leap

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The creative and liberatory potential of embodied thinking
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part I|49 pages

Foundations

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chapter 2|18 pages

Transformative and responsive power

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Potentials of embodied thinking
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chapter 3|15 pages

Vitalising critical thinking

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Embodied critical thinking in a philosophical context
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chapter 4|14 pages

Sensing and thinking from within

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Aesthetic perception and embodied thinking
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part II|50 pages

Thinking at the Edge, and Focusing

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chapter 6|16 pages

In search of relational imagination

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An auto-ethnographic journey through training in embodied critical thinking
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chapter 7|17 pages

Refreshing and expanding the meaning of research

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On the use of the TAE process in a micro-phenomenological research project
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part III|43 pages

Micro-phenomenology and meditation

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chapter 8|10 pages

Micro-phenomenology as coming into contact with experience

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Subtilisation, surprises, and liberation
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part IV|68 pages

Emancipations

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chapter 11|10 pages

Focusing on emotions in climate education

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A felt sense of the climate
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chapter 12|16 pages

Embodied critical thinking and environmental embeddedness

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The sensed knots of knowledge
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chapter 13|15 pages

Focusing in the school of architecture

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chapter 14|19 pages

Learning to catalyse socio-ecological change

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Reflective practice experiments
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