Lived experience and the naturalization of bodily experience: An ecological proposal
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Sage Publications Ltd
Materia
Ecological psychology Embodiment Enactivism
Fecha
2025-09-02Referencia bibliográfica
Heras-Escribano, M., López-Silva, P., & Lobo, L. (2025). Lived experience and the naturalization of bodily experience: An ecological proposal. Theory & Psychology, 35(4), 508-528. https://doi.org/10.1177/09593543251355149
Patrocinador
MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 - European Union (RYC2022-036688-I, t CNS2022-136195); Ayudas fundación BBVA a proyectos de investigación científica 2021; FONDECYT (no. 1221058)Resumen
In this paper we defend the idea that ecological psychology is in a good position for making
sense of bodily experience by naturalizing some of the most important features of Husserlian
lived experience, such as kinesthetics or proprioception. Some postcognitivist researchers
have suggested that the notion of lived experience, originated in Husserl’s phenomenological
project, is fundamental to make sense of the concept of bodily experience. Recently, it has been
suggested that, when considering Husserl’s notion of lived experience, ecological psychology
lacks the conceptual resources to make sense of this notion, for it is focused on goal-directed
tasks. In contrast, enactivism is allegedly in better shape to make sense of the concept due to its
direct roots in the phenomenological tradition. After contextualizing the debate, in this paper we
claim that all the relevant aspects attributed to the Husserlian notion of lived experience can be
accounted for within the scientific framework of ecological psychology. We conclude that there
are enough materials to start defining an embodied and situated naturalization of the notion of
bodily experience from an ecological perspective.





