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Enactive intersubjectivity: Participatory sense-making and mutual incorporation
Authors:Thomas Fuchs  Hanne De Jaegher
Institution:(1) Department of General Psychiatry, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany;(2) Centre for Computational Neuroscience and Robotics, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK;(3) Phenomenological Psychopathology and Psychotherapy, Psychiatric Department, University of Heidelberg, Voss-Str.4, 69115 Heidelberg, Germany;(4) Psychiatric Department, University of Heidelberg, Voss-Str.4, 69115 Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract:Current theories of social cognition are mainly based on a representationalist view. Moreover, they focus on a rather sophisticated and limited aspect of understanding others, i.e. on how we predict and explain others’ behaviours through representing their mental states. Research into the ‘social brain’ has also favoured a third-person paradigm of social cognition as a passive observation of others’ behaviour, attributing it to an inferential, simulative or projective process in the individual brain. In this paper, we present a concept of social understanding as an ongoing, dynamical process of participatory sense-making and mutual incorporation. This process may be described (1) from a dynamical agentive systems point of view as an interaction and coordination of two embodied agents; (2) from a phenomenological approach as a mutual incorporation, i.e. a process in which the lived bodies of both participants extend and form a common intercorporality. Intersubjectivity, it is argued, is not a solitary task of deciphering or simulating the movements of others but means entering a process of embodied interaction and generating common meaning through it. This approach will be further illustrated by an analysis of primary dyadic interaction in early childhood.
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