Table of contents
Acknowledgmentsxiii
Introductionxv
Notesxxxiii
Section I: Foundations1
1. Neandertals3
2. Part I Consciousness: A Natural History41
2. Part II Consciousness: An Aristotelian Account89
3. The Primacy of Movement131
Section II: Methodology177
4. Husserl and Von Hemholtz — and the Possibility of a Trans-Disciplinary Communal Task179
5. On Learning to Move Oneself: A Constructive Phenomenology223
6. Merleau-Ponty: A Man in Search of a Method273
7. Does Philosophy Begin (and End) in Wonder? or What Is the Nature of a Philosophic Act? A
Methodological Postscript321
Section III: Applications343
8. On the Significance of Animate Form345
9. Human Speech Perception and an Evolutionary Semantics371
10. Why a Mind Is Not a Brain and a Brain Is Not a Body401
11. What Is It Like to Be a Brain?451
12. Thinking in Movement483
References519
Index of Subjects549
Index of Names577
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