III. Merleau-Ponty and Structuralism

Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 2 (3):46-52 (1971)
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Abstract

Structuralism could be said to try to predict the strictly unpredictable by suggesting general patterns into which contingent variables are likely to fall. merleau-ponty suggests that expressive means, e.g., words or notes are the necessary but not sufficient condition of authentic speech or music. gelb and golstein's patient schneider is disabled in so far as he has to string together units of behavior. the article examines how far expressive space is independent of conceptualized and mentally rehearsable movements, as merleau-ponty holds that it is. the example of stringed instrument playing suggests that there may be a ghost in the machine

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