Key word "implicit knowledge"
Antlová A., Chudý S., Buchtová T. & Kučerová L. (2015) The importance of values in the constructivist theory of knowledge. Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences 203: 210–216. https://cepa.info/5874
Antlová A., Chudý S., Buchtová T. & Kučerová L.
(
2015)
The importance of values in the constructivist theory of knowledge.
Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences 203: 210–216.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/5874
The intended study is to reveal the importance of values in the process of constructing our implicit knowledge. There is a strong connection between emotions and knowledge and this relationship appears especially in the process of evaluation. Our approach describes knowledge as more intuitive and emotional and unconscious than is traditionally proclaimed. It serves especially practical and useful purpose and our former experience is its foundation. As we evaluate the world which we get to know, our system of knowledge contains also its meaning for us, our value system is hidden in it and it influences our further conduct. Our activity is the aim of our life, through which we cause changes in the world as well as in us.
Riegler A. (2007) The radical constructivist dynamics of cognition. In: Wallace B. (ed.) The Mind, the Body and the World: Psychology After Cognitivism?. Imprint, London: 91–115. https://cepa.info/1777
Riegler A.
(
2007)
The radical constructivist dynamics of cognition.
In: Wallace B. (ed.) The Mind, the Body and the World: Psychology After Cognitivism?. Imprint, London: 91–115.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/1777
The radical constructivist perspective points in the direction of a post-cognitivist psychology which (a) does not get stuck in perceptual overload, (b) does not run into epistemological problems of (propositional) knowledge representation, (c) takes the undifferentiated encoding of nervous signals into consideration, (d) does not exclude animals from being cognitive, and (e) accounts for implicit knowledge.
Valenzuela-Moguillansky C. (2013) Pain and Body Awareness. An Exploration of the Bodily Experience of Persons Suffering from Fibromyalgia. Constructivist Foundations 8(3): 339-350. https://constructivist.info/8/3/339
Valenzuela-Moguillansky C.
(
2013)
Pain and Body Awareness. An Exploration of the Bodily Experience of Persons Suffering from Fibromyalgia.
Constructivist Foundations 8(3): 339-350.
Fulltext at https://constructivist.info/8/3/339
Context: Despite the fact that pain and body awareness are by definition subjective experiences, most studies assessing these phenomena and the relationship between them have done so from a “third-person” perspective, meaning that they have used methods whose aim is to try to objectify the phenomena under study. Problem: This article assesses the question of what is the impact of a widespread chronic pain condition in the bodily experience of persons suffering from fibromyalgia. Method: I used an interview methodology stemming from a phenomenological approach called the “elicitation interview.” Results: The results indicate that the intensification of fibromyalgia pain does in fact affect different aspects of body awareness: in particular, experienced body size, weight and localization, as well as the experience of owning one’s own body. In addition, these disruptions in patient’s body awareness have as a result, a modification of the experience of pain, leading to the apparently paradoxical experience of being in pain while not feeling it. Implications: The elicitation interview approach made it possible to gather and analyze descriptions of the bodily experience of persons suffering from fibromyalgia. This approach allowed the consideration of the hypothesis that the disruption of implicit knowledge of the topography of patients’ bodies prevents them from referring to the pain sensation in terms of its localization and intensity, transforming the sensation in a way that is experienced as paradoxical. Further studies should be conducted that focus on the interplay between attention, pain and body perception. Constructivist content: The study presented in this article is framed within the perspective that the study of conscious phenomena should consider a first-person perspective, which is in line with constructivist approaches.
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