This volume identifies and develops how philosophy of mind and phenomenology interact in both conceptual and empirically-informed ways. The objective is to demonstrate that phenomenology, as the first-personal study of the contents and structures of our mentality, can provide us with insights into the understanding of the mind and can complement strictly analytical or empirically informed approaches to the study of the mind. Insofar as phenomenology, as the study or science of phenomena, allows the mind to appear, this collection shows how the mind can reappearthrough a constructive dialogue between different waysphenomenological, analytical, and empiricalof understanding mentality.
Introduction Section I: Introspection and Phenomenal Consciousness 1.Cognitive Phenomenology David Woodruff Smith 2. For-me-ness: What It Is and What It Is NotDan Zahavi and Uriah Kriegel Section II: Embodiment and Sociality 3. Lived Body, Intercorporeality, Intersubjectivity: The Body as a Phenomenological Theme Dermot Moran 4. The Body and Its Image in the Clinical Encounter Doroth?e Legrand 5. Merleau-Ponty: Actions, Habits, and Skilled ExpertiseKomarine Romdenh-Romluc 6. The Minds of Others Shaun Gallagher Section III: Self-Awareness and Knowledge 7. Interoception and Self-Awareness: An Exploration in Interoceptive Phenomenology Daniel O. Dahlstrom 8. Knowing Ones Own Desires Jonathan Webber 9. Phenomenal Conservatism and the Principle of All Principles Walter Hopp Section IV: Perception and Dreams 10. Hearing, Seeing, and Music in the MiddleDan Lloyd 11. Eyes Wide Shut: Sartres Phls,