Sep 25, 2004 21:48
20 yrs ago
English term
meaning of this phrase
English
Social Sciences
Psychology
Embodiment concerns the ways that people come to inhabit their bodies so they become, in every sense of the term, habituated, dwelled in, taken for granted.
Does "they become" refer to: 1.people who "become habituated, dwelled in, taken for granted", or 2.bodies which "become habituated, dwelled in , taken for granted by people"?
What "habituated" means in this context?
Does "they become" refer to: 1.people who "become habituated, dwelled in, taken for granted", or 2.bodies which "become habituated, dwelled in , taken for granted by people"?
What "habituated" means in this context?
Responses
+4
5 mins
Selected
accustomed, settled, think their bodies will be that way forever
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Peer comment(s):
agree |
DGK T-I
: I'd put it that ones body comes to be something that a person is 'used to' / accustomed to - bodies come to be habitual/a habit (something normal/natural/routine for the person, & expected to be there by the person)
29 mins
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well put. Thank you Giuli. Hope you'll be in Sheffield next week
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agree |
Martin Perazzo
: More accurately answers the askers question about "habituated"!
47 mins
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cheers Martin
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agree |
Lisa Russell
: http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=hab...
5 hrs
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cheers Lisa, very good link
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agree |
Montefiore
8 hrs
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cheers Montefiore
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "thank you"
+9
3 mins
2.bodies
2.bodies which "become habituated, dwelled in , taken for granted by people"
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Michał Janowski
: bez w±tpienia
1 min
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agree |
DGK T-I
15 mins
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agree |
Johanne Bouthillier
16 mins
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agree |
Tehani
28 mins
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agree |
Martin Perazzo
48 mins
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agree |
Rajan Chopra
4 hrs
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agree |
Saleh Chowdhury, Ph.D.
6 hrs
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agree |
airmailrpl
: -
7 hrs
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agree |
Armorel Young
14 hrs
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+1
23 mins
2nd questions : habituated
I think the author is confused here because while it is clearly the bodies that are dwelled in and taken for granted, it can only be the people who are habituated (to their own body)
Peer comment(s):
neutral |
DGK T-I
: Not necessarily.'A person being habituated' is more usual, but habituated can be applied this way(to mean an object,custom,attitude etc made habitual -ref. OED)although it's rarer.It may possibly also be psychological jargon (customary or improvised)
20 mins
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thank you
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agree |
Montefiore
7 hrs
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+1
1 hr
habituated
"habituated" can have a specific meaning in psychology, as defined by the American Heritage Dictionary:
VERB: Inflected forms: ha·bit·u·at·ed, ha·bit·u·at·ing, ha·bit·u·ates
TRANSITIVE VERB: To accustom by frequent repetition or prolonged exposure.
INTRANSITIVE VERB: 1. To cause physiological or psychological habituation, as to a drug. 2. Psychology To experience habituation.
In your sentence, "to habituate" is an intransitive verb, so I would bet that this is the particular definition here.
definition of habituation:
NOUN: 1. The process of habituating or the state of being habituated. 2a. Physiological tolerance to a drug resulting from repeated use. b. Psychological dependence on a drug. 3. Psychology The decline of a conditioned response following repeated exposure to the conditioned stimulus.
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Note added at 1 hr 56 mins (2004-09-25 23:45:17 GMT)
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your second answer (2) would be correct.
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Note added at 8 hrs 32 mins (2004-09-26 06:21:50 GMT)
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:) cheers Montefiore
VERB: Inflected forms: ha·bit·u·at·ed, ha·bit·u·at·ing, ha·bit·u·ates
TRANSITIVE VERB: To accustom by frequent repetition or prolonged exposure.
INTRANSITIVE VERB: 1. To cause physiological or psychological habituation, as to a drug. 2. Psychology To experience habituation.
In your sentence, "to habituate" is an intransitive verb, so I would bet that this is the particular definition here.
definition of habituation:
NOUN: 1. The process of habituating or the state of being habituated. 2a. Physiological tolerance to a drug resulting from repeated use. b. Psychological dependence on a drug. 3. Psychology The decline of a conditioned response following repeated exposure to the conditioned stimulus.
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Note added at 1 hr 56 mins (2004-09-25 23:45:17 GMT)
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your second answer (2) would be correct.
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Note added at 8 hrs 32 mins (2004-09-26 06:21:50 GMT)
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:) cheers Montefiore
Reference:
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Montefiore
: you are right, I was wrong the first time:) I read it more carefully now
6 hrs
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i don't think people can be "dwelled in"-- bodies are
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Discussion