Table of Contents

  1. Title page
  2. Copyright page
  3. Preface and Acknowledgments
  4. Introduction: Understanding the Bodily Self
  5. 1 Nonconceptual Self-Consciousness and Cognitive Science
  6. 2 Ecological Perception and the Notion of a Nonconceptual Point of View
  7. 3 The Sources of Self-Consciousness
  8. 4 The Elusiveness Thesis, Immunity to Error through Misidentification, and Privileged Access
  9. 5 The Phenomenology of Bodily Awareness
  10. 6 Bodily Awareness and Self-Consciousness
  11. 7 Bodily Ownership, Bodily Awareness, and Knowledge without Observation
  12. 8 Ownership and the Space of the Body
  13. 9 Bodily Ownership, Psychological Ownership, and Psychopathology
  14. 10 The Bodily Self, Commonsense Psychology, and the Springs of Action
  15. Afterword: Looking Ahead
  16. Index

List of Tables

  1. Table 10.1

List of Illustrations

  1. Figure 3.1 Peacocke’s delta account of representation-independent judgments. (Fig. 6.2 from Peacocke 1999, p. 279.)
  2. Figure 6.1 Body-relative information: the basic distinctions.
  3. Figure 6.2 Body-relative information: a taxomomy.
  4. Figure 8.1 Illustration of the differences in perspective in the full-body illusion (A) and the body-swap illusion (B). From Serino et al. 2013.
  5. Figure 8.2 Marr and Nishihara’s model of the human body as a hierarchy of generalized cones. From Marr and Nishihara 1978.
  6. Figure 10.1 The Ebbinghaus size contrast illusion.
  7. Figure 10.2 The flanker task interference paradigm. Short dashes = blue; solid lines = red; long dashes = yellow.

Guide

  1. Cover
  2. Table of Contents