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Toward a radically embodied, embedded social psychology
Author(s) -
Marsh Kerry L.,
Johnston Lucy,
Richardson Michael J.,
Schmidt R. C.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
european journal of social psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.609
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1099-0992
pISSN - 0046-2772
DOI - 10.1002/ejsp.666
Subject(s) - affordance , embodied cognition , perspective (graphical) , action (physics) , construct (python library) , psychology , meaning (existential) , social psychology , relation (database) , epistemology , cognitive science , sociology , cognitive psychology , computer science , artificial intelligence , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics , database , psychotherapist , programming language
A roadmap toward a more radically embodied social psychology is offered. The perspective embeds embodied minds in a niche: A physical and social environment with action possibilities (“affordances”) that humans are equipped to utilize. At the heart of this embedded perspective is the suggestion that the methods and conceptualizations of integrating the body into social psychology must be inherently more relational, approaching meaning as emerging from the relation of the individual to its environment, as instantiated in the affordance construct (Gibson, 1977, 1979). Moreover, a more radical embodiment also demands that scientists reexamine the environment, in a way that goes beyond the truism that the environment influences the individual, to understand how meaning's emergence from individual‐environment interactions obeys universal dynamical principles. In addition, the perspective illustrates that embedding an individual within an emergent social unit of action, a dyadic relationship or a group, provides new possibilities for perceiving and acting that both constrain and extend an individual's way of interacting with the environment. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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