estudos:dreyfus:rouse-coping-intentionality
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| + | ====== Joseph Rouse – Coping with Intentionality ====== | ||
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| + | In this section, I shall explicate Dreyfus’s account of the intentionality of practical coping without foregrounding his insistence upon its tacit, atheoretical, | ||
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| + | By “practical coping,” Dreyfus means to indicate the mostly smooth and unobtrusive responsiveness to circumstances that enables human beings to get around in the world. Its scope extends from mundane activities like using utensils to eat, walking across uneven terrain, or sitting and working at a desk, to the extraordinary mastery exhibited in competitive athletic performances or grandmaster chess. Tools figure prominently in these coping activities. Often we competently deal with a wide range of equipment as the background to more thematic performances: | ||
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| + | The intentionality of practical coping is a directedness of bodies rather than minds. Dreyfus emphasizes bodily coordination and orientation toward the task at hand, as one hammers a nail, sits in a chair, drives to the grocery, or exchanges pleasantries at a party. Here a body is not an object with fixed boundaries, but the practical unification of coordinated activity. Mastery of a tool allows its incorporation within the field of one’s bodily comportment; | ||
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| + | Such practical comportment is directed toward an actual situation. Three points are figured in this formulation. First, practical intentional comportment is not mediated by mental representations, | ||
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| + | This situational character of practical coping is an analogue to other intentional manifestations in a particular aspect or under a description. Intentional directedness traditionally has a sense, a particular “way” in which its object is manifest. Dreyfus takes this aspectual character of practical coping to be neither an “objective” characteristic of the things manifested, nor a definite projection or anticipation by an agent, but rather an intra-active [^Karen Barad coins this term in her discussion of scientific apparatus and the phenomena it measures, to emphasize that neither measurement apparatus nor objects measured are determinately identifiable prior to or apart from specific forms of encounter “between” them. " | ||
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| + | *In everyday absorbed coping,. .. when one’s situation deviates from some optimal body-environment relationship, | ||
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| + | * | ||
| + | The situation is significant, | ||
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| + | The intra-activity of this manifestation reinforces Dreyfus’s insistence that practical coping takes us directly to the things themselves. We can think in the absence of what is thought about, without losing the sense of our thoughts. To dribble in the absence of the basketball, however, is merely to pretend to dribble (or to fail to dribble). The activity is entirely different if there is no actual pattern of resistance and affordance to what one does, for practical coping is a responsiveness to such patterns. It is directed toward the actual environment, | ||
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| + | This feature of the intentionality of practical comportment highlights Dreyfus’s conjoining of two points that have often been conceived in opposition to one another. Practical comportment is a thoroughly material responsiveness to a material world. The hand that gently conforms itself to the contours of a teacup in a well-balanced grasp, the softball player who tracks the incoming fly ball and the tagging runner at third as she sets herself to catch and throw home in a single fluid response, or the conversationalist whose stance, expressions, | ||
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| + | * McCarthy seems to assume that [“being at home"] is the same thing as being in my house, that is, that it is a physical state. But I can be at home and be in the backyard, that is, not physically in my house at all. I can also be physically in my house and not be at home; for example, if I own the house but have not yet moved my furniture in. Being at home is a human situation.[^Hubert L. Dreyfus, What Computers Can’t Do: The Limits of Artificial Intelligence, | ||
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| + | There “is” nothing there in the situation besides its material constituents, | ||
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| + | What “configures” a situation is the possibility of intelligible response to it by a being to whom the situation and its outcome matter. A situation is thus organized as a field of possible activity with something at stake. Dreyfus’s Heideggerian account of situatedness structurally resembles Kant’s conception of agency as the “end” of a practical stance toward the world as “means.” Human beings are that “for-the-sake-of-which” a situation is meaningfully oriented; its constituents are “in-order-to” realize some possible way of being a “for-the-sake-of-which.” The stakes in a situation, however, are not some more or less definite end, but a way of being: an open-ended practical grasp of how to make one’s way in the world as a teacher, a gay man, a politically engaged citizen, a parent, a Presbyterian, | ||
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| + | The normativity that marks practical coping as genuinely intentional might thus seem pragmatic instead of alethic, marked by success or failure in dealing with circumstances and fulfilling various roles, rather than correct representation. Successful coping, however, is not the fulfillment of prespecifiable success conditions, but instead the maintenance and development of one’s belonging to a practice through a flexible responsiveness to circumstances (think of successfully riding a bicycle across changing terrain). It would be better, therefore, to blur any such contrast between practical success and alethic disclosure. Not only does Dreyfus follow Heidegger in seeing practical coping as a kind of revealing; he explicitly denies any sharp contrast between acting and perceiving. Perceiving is neither a passive registration nor an intellectual synthesis, but is itself a kind of coping activity. Seeing a moving object, hearing spoken words, tasting a liquid, or feeling a texture requires an appropriate bodily set and a coordinated exploratory movement. Likewise, sustained activities involve a perceptive attentiveness to relevant circumstances, | ||
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| + | We can now see an additional reason why a situation is not identical to a “merely” physical juxtaposition of objects. The situations that call for practical coping are constitutively temporal. The intentional directedness of an embodied agent does not just extend spatially beyond itself toward the object of its concerns. It is also a temporal directedness ahead toward the possible activities that would sustain its way of being. Such a situated directedness toward intelligible possibilities does not exist apart from actual configurations of equipment that can engage extant bodily repertoires of responsiveness, | ||
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| + | This “historical” dimension of practical coping is perhaps most evident in the disciplining of bodies. Bodily repertoires for coping with surroundings are “produced by a specific technology of manipulation and formation.”[^Hubert L. Dreyfus and Paul Rabinow, Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics. 2d ed.. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983, 166.] Both the pervasive normalization of “das Man” and the bodily disciplines described by Foucault are ways in which bodily capacities are shaped and refined by physical surroundings and other bodily responses. These capacities are not produced by habitual repetition of movements, however, but by constraining and redirecting a body’s active exploratory coping with its surroundings. Bodies are the assimilation of past practice refocused toward future possibilities; | ||
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| + | Recognition of the role of Foucauldian disciplines in shaping practical coping capacities might mistakenly suggest that the body as meaningful practical repertoire could be assembled from meaningless motions. After all, Foucault described techniques for the analysis and reconstruction of movements, “a breakdown of the total gesture into two parallel series: that of the parts of the body to be used . . . and that of the parts of the object manipulated . . . then the two sets of parts are correlated together according to a number of simple gestures | ||
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| + | To recapitulate briefly, practical coping is “intentional” in two crucial respects. First, it is directed toward a situation under an aspect, which is constituted by the interrelations between how one comports oneself toward it, and what that comportment is for. How one reaches for, grasps, lifts, and tilts a cup gets its coherence from the cup’s being for-sipping-from, | ||
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