APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation:

Thesis advisor: Richard Kearney === All our movements presuppose our being oriented. But what does it mean for the embodied subject to be oriented in space? How is the egocentric space of the lived body connected to the larger domain of objective space? While Husserl explored how the egocentric subj...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Joyce, Sharon Lynn
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:109029
id ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_109029
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1090292021-01-20T05:01:13Z APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation: Joyce, Sharon Lynn Thesis advisor: Richard Kearney Text thesis 2020 Boston College English electronic application/pdf All our movements presuppose our being oriented. But what does it mean for the embodied subject to be oriented in space? How is the egocentric space of the lived body connected to the larger domain of objective space? While Husserl explored how the egocentric subject comes to situate itself within intersubjectively constituted objective space, Merleau-Ponty’s further inquiry into pre-objective spatiality suggests that the embodied subject is always already oriented beyond itself, via its connections to the three dimensions of the physical world. His work on the subjective experience of depth and verticality laid the groundwork for a phenomenology of the three dimensions, which I undertake here. For each of the three dimensions—verticality, horizontality and depth—I explore the interconnections among a) the sensed dimensions of bodily space b) the dimensions of intersubjective space and c) the geometric, abstract axes of objective space. Each of the dimensions in lived space is qualitatively distinct, both as sensed in the body and perceived externally, and they differ accordingly as bearers of meaning. My primary aim is to elucidate the specific character of the dimensions in all their expressive, existential, and cultural significance; this is done first at the level of subjective, bodily spatiality and then again at the broader cultural and historical level. To this end, I look to philosophy as well as to visual art, architecture, the history of religion and myth, psychology, cognitive linguistics and neuroscience. Investigating the axes of the body in relation to the dimensions of the world means asking about orientation itself, for it lies at their nexus. I examine the role of spatial orientation in self-understanding, self-identity and memory as well as in shaping relations with the Other. Ultimately, the prevailing cultural (western) ideas of modern space and subjectivity, rooted in the cogito, prove to be in tension with a phenomenology of space and the three dimensions. The primacy of egocentricity deserves to be questioned in light of various alternate modes of spatial experience (attuned, shared) and alternate modes of orientation (allocentric, absolute). I conclude that orientation is better described as symbiotic and reciprocal, with the lived body always in relation to the world beyond itself. Dimensions Merleau-Ponty Orientation Phenomenology Space Vertical Copyright is held by the author. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0). Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2020. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Philosophy. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:109029
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Dimensions
Merleau-Ponty
Orientation
Phenomenology
Space
Vertical
spellingShingle Dimensions
Merleau-Ponty
Orientation
Phenomenology
Space
Vertical
Joyce, Sharon Lynn
APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation:
description Thesis advisor: Richard Kearney === All our movements presuppose our being oriented. But what does it mean for the embodied subject to be oriented in space? How is the egocentric space of the lived body connected to the larger domain of objective space? While Husserl explored how the egocentric subject comes to situate itself within intersubjectively constituted objective space, Merleau-Ponty’s further inquiry into pre-objective spatiality suggests that the embodied subject is always already oriented beyond itself, via its connections to the three dimensions of the physical world. His work on the subjective experience of depth and verticality laid the groundwork for a phenomenology of the three dimensions, which I undertake here. For each of the three dimensions—verticality, horizontality and depth—I explore the interconnections among a) the sensed dimensions of bodily space b) the dimensions of intersubjective space and c) the geometric, abstract axes of objective space. Each of the dimensions in lived space is qualitatively distinct, both as sensed in the body and perceived externally, and they differ accordingly as bearers of meaning. My primary aim is to elucidate the specific character of the dimensions in all their expressive, existential, and cultural significance; this is done first at the level of subjective, bodily spatiality and then again at the broader cultural and historical level. To this end, I look to philosophy as well as to visual art, architecture, the history of religion and myth, psychology, cognitive linguistics and neuroscience. Investigating the axes of the body in relation to the dimensions of the world means asking about orientation itself, for it lies at their nexus. I examine the role of spatial orientation in self-understanding, self-identity and memory as well as in shaping relations with the Other. Ultimately, the prevailing cultural (western) ideas of modern space and subjectivity, rooted in the cogito, prove to be in tension with a phenomenology of space and the three dimensions. The primacy of egocentricity deserves to be questioned in light of various alternate modes of spatial experience (attuned, shared) and alternate modes of orientation (allocentric, absolute). I conclude that orientation is better described as symbiotic and reciprocal, with the lived body always in relation to the world beyond itself. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2020. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: Philosophy.
author Joyce, Sharon Lynn
author_facet Joyce, Sharon Lynn
author_sort Joyce, Sharon Lynn
title APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation:
title_short APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation:
title_full APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation:
title_fullStr APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation:
title_full_unstemmed APhenomenological Study of the Three Dimensions—Verticality, Horizontality, and Depth—and their Role in Orientation:
title_sort aphenomenological study of the three dimensions—verticality, horizontality, and depth—and their role in orientation:
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:109029
work_keys_str_mv AT joycesharonlynn aphenomenologicalstudyofthethreedimensionsverticalityhorizontalityanddepthandtheirroleinorientation
_version_ 1719373238729965568