Radical Enactivism and the Neo-Pragmatist Problem of the Origins of Content: A Radical Embodied Intervention
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Heras Escribano, ManuelEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Content Ecological psychology Normativity
Fecha
2025-11-12Referencia bibliográfica
Heras-Escribano, M. Radical Enactivism and the Neo-Pragmatist Problem of the Origins of Content: A Radical Embodied Intervention. Topoi (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11245-025-10293-2
Patrocinador
MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 - European Union, NextGenerationEU/PRTR (CNS2022-136195); MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 - European Social Fund, ESF (Contrato Ramón y Cajal RYC2022-036688-I)Resumen
Neo-pragmatists claim that individual intelligence derives from socio-normative practices and not the other way round.
However, this leads to the neo-pragmatist problem of the origins of content, which can be summarized as follows: if
intentionality only derives from social practices, how is it possible that the capacities needed to explain participation in
those social practices could be in place prior to acquiring them? It seems that we presume the kind of intentional content
that we need to acquire. Radical enactivists (REC) proposed a solution based on differentiating two kinds of intentionality (intentionality as directedness or Ur-intentionality and intentionality as aboutness). In REC’s framework, biological
functions provide for mechanisms of social recognition and allow for social conformism, hence facilitating participation
in content-involving normative practices. However, these mechanisms are not explained in detail, nor are the transitions
clearly depicted. In sum, it is simply assumed, not explained, that we can move from directedness or ur-intentionality to
content-involving/representational or aboutness intentionality, but there is neither a scientifically supported nor a detailed
conceptual explanation for supporting this. I propose that it is possible to escape this problem from the standpoint of
radical embodiment thanks to ecological psychology and non-descriptive social normativity. This radical embodied move
of combining non-descriptive normativity and ecological psychology could serve as a basis for two achievements: (1)
redefining the strategy of the natural origins of content in non-representational terms to explain the continuity between
these two kinds of intentionality, and (2) solving the neo-pragmatist problem associated with it at the same time.





