The Pairing Account of Infant Direct Social Perception

Journal of Consciousness Studies 27 (1-2):173-205 (2019)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

This paper evaluates Husserl’s and Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenological notion of pairing in light of a representative variety of findings and views in contemporary developmental psychology. This notion belongs to the direct social perception framework, which suggests that the fundamental access to other minds is intuitive, or perceptual. Pairing entails that the perception of other minds relies merely on first-person embodied experience and domain-general processes. For this reason, pairing is opposed to cognitive nativist views that assume specialized mechanisms for low-level mental state attribution, while it is compatible with acknowledging innate affective tendencies. I criticize cognitive nativism for being based on ambiguous evidence. I argue that in early social interactions infants experience sufficient self–other similarities to ground the most primitive perception of others as minded beings. I show that pairing can account for the ontogenetically earliest perceptions of others’ actions and emotions, as well as for the earliest perception of others’ perceptions.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,592

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Husserl's 'Pairing' Relation and the Role of Others in Infant Perception.S. Bredlau - 2016 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 23 (3-4):8-30.
Seeing emotions without mindreading them.Joulia Smortchkova - 2017 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 16 (3):525-543.
What Distinguishes Perception From Hallucination.Brian Paul Mclaughlin - 1981 - Dissertation, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Self–other contingencies: Enacting social perception.Marek McGann & Hanne De Jaegher - 2009 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 8 (4):417-437.
Milk and flesh: A phenomenological reflection on infancy and coexistence.Eva-Maria Simms - 2001 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 32 (1):22-40.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-02-14

Downloads
54 (#293,687)

6 months
13 (#190,190)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references