Netzwerk Phänomenologische Metaphysik
145823

(2001) Human Studies 24 (1-2).

Phenomenology of the body and its implications for humanistic ethics and politics

Hong Woo Kim

pp. 69-85

This paper explores the question of embodiment/disembodiment discussed by Hwa Yol Jung mainly in his recent work, Rethinking Political Theory (1993a) in tandem with an examination of some recent developments in Korean scholarship on the same subject. To sum up, the following three points are emphasized. First, this living body does not exist except in specific modalities. In this sense, Gabriel Marcel's paradigmatic affirmation that I am my body requires an elaboration of the specific modalities of the living body as a being in the world. Second, the way a living body exists is not exclusively mental or physical, but both. In short, it is phenomenal. Third, the point of the whole argument can be summed up as follows: to conceal one's own body is natural, but to forget it is dangerous. The primary task of phenomenology is not to denude human beings, but to reawaken ourselves to the idea that we are beings who live with and through bodies.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1010706827877

Full citation:

Kim, H.W. (2001). Phenomenology of the body and its implications for humanistic ethics and politics. Human Studies 24 (1-2), pp. 69-85.

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