I'm not really aware of a field of philosophy specifically about the body, though. Mostly just mind-body relations, not all of which are about repudiation or doubt; plenty of philosophers emphasize the unity of mind and body.
As a rock climber, this has become very apparent to me in how I "read" or in fact see a cliff face and its features as ways of orienting my body and its mass and momentum in relation to further features. I see things in a cliff face that a non-climber simply doesn't see, especially ways of gaining purchase by various kinds of oppositions of pressure. I see my body up there. I see my center of gravity in relation to the holds. What it is for the features to be what they are to me is how my body can fit and navigate them under the pull of gravity using Newton's laws (bodily-intuitively understood). — petrichor
I would mention EMBODIMENT by James B. Nelson, which is a book about the theology of being flesh and blood. Since its publication in 1978, we might have made some progress in accepting the enormous significance of being physical beings. It may seem obvious that we are creatures of flesh and blood--meat--but there is a strong tendency (coming out of Christian theology among other sources) to view the really important aspect of our humanity as non physical--spirit, soul, psyche, all that.
Is anyone aware of any philosophy of the body? — NOS4A2
Mind is a bodily process - no different than your breathing or digesting is. Philosophy of mind would fall under the category of philosophy of body, which is really a scientific, not a philosophical, matter.
As a matter of fact, philosophy is a science.
This is a contradiction.Philosophy of mind and neuroscience tends to do away with the body, focussing instead on abstracted parts of the body, ie. brains and nervous systems, — NOS4A2
But that was my point - that mind is a process. I never mentioned the incoherent dichotomy of materialism/idealism, physical/mental, etc. That would indeed be dualism. I am proposing a monistic view of the body and mind - a scientific view.as if mind or consciousness ends and begins where the brain and nervous system does. This seems like a sort of Cartesian materialism, or materialist dualism. — NOS4A2
This is a contradiction.
But that was my point - that mind is a process. I never mentioned the incoherent dichotomy of materialism/idealism, physical/mental, etc. That would indeed be dualism. I am proposing a monistic view of the body and mind - a scientific view.
But the brain is part of the body, so in studying the brain, you are studying the body.True, but what I meant was the rest of the body, ie, not the brain. A body is more than a brain and nervous system. — NOS4A2
I feel that it is localized in the nervous system, not just the brain. The nervous system runs through the whole body. I feel the extended aspect of my mind when I focus on the feelings in my extremities. When I stub my toe, I feel it in my toe, not my brain.I am speaking about the idea that mind or consciousness is localized in the brain, rather than extending throughout the entirety of the organism. — NOS4A2
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