Litcius/Paper detail

F/acts Ways of Enactive Worldmaking

Ezequiel A. Di Paolo

2023Journal of Consciousness Studies17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Knowing is an activity through which agents and world produce themselves. This is often expressed by the enactive claim that agents bring forth a world. I analyse this idea for different modes of agent–environment engagement: interactional, transactional, and constitutional. Something is produced in each case. Bringing forth a world is not only an epistemic but an ontological claim. Acts in their fine structure result from a process of fact production, or f/acts. F/acts co-emerge with their 'preconditions', e.g.intentions, affordances, across the subject/object divide. F/acts define their inner temporality and affectivity, comprising both event and experience. A plurality of worlds is admitted in this enactive view, without entailing antirealism. We cannot bring forth just any world. World resistance organizes action and experience. I touch on the implications for objectivity and free will and discuss the primordiality of activity, community, and relationality. From a notion of groundlessness in early enactive work, I suggest that a participatory universe is better conceived as a meshwork of groundless grounds.

Topics & Concepts

EpistemologyTemporalityObjectivity (philosophy)AffordancePsychologyObject (grammar)Action (physics)CONTESTUndoSociologyCognitive sciencePhilosophyComputer scienceCognitive psychologyLinguisticsPhysicsOperating systemQuantum mechanicsTheologyEmbodied and Extended CognitionMental Health and PsychiatryPsychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment