30 novembre 2022
info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
Frédérique de Vignemont, « Ten problems of ownership », HAL SHS (Sciences de l’Homme et de la Société), ID : 10670/1.b3fc62...
The body is a material entity located in space and time in the same way as a rock, a tree or a bird. But do we perceive and experience our body like those other objects? Most philosophical interest for bodily awareness has come from its peculiarities. It is precisely because we assume that we are aware of our body differently from other objects that it raises many questions. But what makes it unique? The most intuitive answer is that it bears a special relation to the self, and to self-awareness. Yet, although introspectively familiar, it is hard to exactly pinpoint the nature of this specific relationship. Thanks to their privileged relation to our body, bodily experiences seem to afford awareness of our body as being our own, what has been called the sense of bodily ownership, for want of a better name. 1 In my book, Mind the body (2018), I explored what it takes to be aware of one's body as one's own but I had to face a number of issues, many of which are still unresolved, and since then, new ones have raised. The aim of this chapter is to offer a very brief outline of the main questions and puzzles that await those interested in bodily ownership. I have picked ten of them, to echo Michael Tye's famous Ten problems of consciousness, but there are many more, I am afraid, and each problem raises major issues that deserve much more than the space allocated here.