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008 181003s2006 stk||||fr 00| u|eng u
040 _aES-MaCDM
100 1 _aPakes, Anna
_9137141
245 0 _aDance's Mind-Body Problem
_cAnna Pakes
260 _c2006
_aEdinburgh:
_bEdinburgh University Press,
300 _a18 p.
520 _aRESUMEN: At the beginning of this article, the hypothetical dancer's answer to Wittgenstein's question about raising his arm suggested mental causation and phenomenal consciousness as important features of dance, which make it more than just movement. If they are indeed fundamental, then they must be central also to any attempt to come to terms with dance philosophically. A position which eliminates either from the picture is unlikely to be able to offer a satisfactory account. Of course, most physicalist would not go so far, but this article has aimed to show how even less extreme physicalist positions encounter difficulties in tackling these aspects of the mind-body problem, and hence in accounting for crucial dimensions of dance activity. This is not to say that a physicalist perspective can never overcome these difficulties, but it does indicate problems that need to be addressed and the appropriateness of a cautious approach to physicalist "solutions" to the mind-body issue within dance.
773 0 _tDance Research
_072889
_wmyd_16032
_gVol. 24, núm. 2, Winter 2006, p. 87 - 104
903 _a87229
_b87229
942 _cART
_2z
999 _c123383
_d123383