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Movement workshop
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The infant, minutes after birth, is capable of imitating the gesture that it sees on the face of another person. The new born baby actively watches moving objects rather than stationary objects. Movement seems to be primacy to our perception from the very beginning. The importance of embodiment for understanding cognition has already been made in numerous ways but the meaning and relevance of movement has been largely unexplored. Aristotle says in Physics that nature has been defined as a principle of motion and change. The task is to understand what Aristotle means by this, and more generally: to investigate the role of movement in the constitution of reality and existence. How do we perceive and experience movement? What kind of role movement has in our everyday life? The conference takes seriously Aristotle’s argument and focuses on the different aspects of sensations of movement i.e. kinaesthesia.
The conference does not want to limit discussion on kinaesthesia in proprioception or the perception of muscular tensions. This philosophy-driven interdisciplinary conference encourages to discuss kinaesthesia whether sensations of motion are internal or exterior to the body, visual or tactic, real or virtual. In what ways are seeing and visual sense based on movement? Does speed dominate the development of current technology? What kind of role movement has when we identify objects in the environment? Why do we want to feel as if we were moving in playing computer games sitting still on a chair? Researchers working in the fields of Philosophy, Cognitive Sciences, Sport and Physical Education, Art and Cultural Studies, Social Sciences, History, Education, Psychology Psychiatry and Computer Sciences are encouraged to submit abstracts. Topics of interest include, although are not limited to, the following (in alphabetic order):