Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of Affordances

This paper aims to situate the roles of attention and habit in contemporary approaches to embodied cognition with particular regard to the conceptualisation of affordances. While Chemero has argued that affordances have a relational character that rules out dispositions, Rietveld and Kiverstein have...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elisa Magrì
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Mimesis Edizioni, Milano 2019-08-01
Series:Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rifp.it/ojs/index.php/rifp/article/view/rifp.2019.0011/936
id doaj-0765e3c0d7934a02becf7c39bbabb240
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0765e3c0d7934a02becf7c39bbabb2402020-11-25T02:07:48ZdeuMimesis Edizioni, MilanoRivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia2039-46672239-26292019-08-0110212013610.4453/rifp.2019.0011Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of AffordancesElisa MagrìThis paper aims to situate the roles of attention and habit in contemporary approaches to embodied cognition with particular regard to the conceptualisation of affordances. While Chemero has argued that affordances have a relational character that rules out dispositions, Rietveld and Kiverstein have suggested that engaging with affordances amounts to exercising skills. By critically reconsidering the distinction between dispositions and abilities proposed by Chemero, as well as the standard theory of habit that underpins accounts of skilful coping (including Rietveld’s and Dreyfus’), I propose to disambiguate habit from skill and to reassess the phenomenology of dispositions. Dispositions are motivational factors that depend on two elements: (i) sensitivity to context clues, which is regulated by habit and attention, and (ii) the positionality of the subject, which is inseparable from context-awareness. Drawing on Husserl’s and Merleau-Ponty’s insights, I argue that both (i) and (ii) can accommodate a dispositional view of affordances.https://www.rifp.it/ojs/index.php/rifp/article/view/rifp.2019.0011/936HabitAttentionAffordancesDispositionsPhenomenologyEmbodied Cognition
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisa Magrì
spellingShingle Elisa Magrì
Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of Affordances
Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia
Habit
Attention
Affordances
Dispositions
Phenomenology
Embodied Cognition
author_facet Elisa Magrì
author_sort Elisa Magrì
title Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of Affordances
title_short Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of Affordances
title_full Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of Affordances
title_fullStr Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of Affordances
title_full_unstemmed Situating Attention and Habit in the Landscape of Affordances
title_sort situating attention and habit in the landscape of affordances
publisher Mimesis Edizioni, Milano
series Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia
issn 2039-4667
2239-2629
publishDate 2019-08-01
description This paper aims to situate the roles of attention and habit in contemporary approaches to embodied cognition with particular regard to the conceptualisation of affordances. While Chemero has argued that affordances have a relational character that rules out dispositions, Rietveld and Kiverstein have suggested that engaging with affordances amounts to exercising skills. By critically reconsidering the distinction between dispositions and abilities proposed by Chemero, as well as the standard theory of habit that underpins accounts of skilful coping (including Rietveld’s and Dreyfus’), I propose to disambiguate habit from skill and to reassess the phenomenology of dispositions. Dispositions are motivational factors that depend on two elements: (i) sensitivity to context clues, which is regulated by habit and attention, and (ii) the positionality of the subject, which is inseparable from context-awareness. Drawing on Husserl’s and Merleau-Ponty’s insights, I argue that both (i) and (ii) can accommodate a dispositional view of affordances.
topic Habit
Attention
Affordances
Dispositions
Phenomenology
Embodied Cognition
url https://www.rifp.it/ojs/index.php/rifp/article/view/rifp.2019.0011/936
work_keys_str_mv AT elisamagri situatingattentionandhabitinthelandscapeofaffordances
_version_ 1724929671265517568