PERSON
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
French phenomenologist (1908–1961) whose <em>Phenomenology of Perception</em> (1945) made the body the ground of consciousness — the single most important philosophical source for Noë's enactivism and the original voice behind nearly everything the AI age now needs to hear about embodiment.
Maurice Merleau-Ponty was the French phenomenologist whose work transformed the study of consciousness by placing the body at its center. Against the Cartesian tradition, which treated the body as an object manipulated by a separate mind, Merleau-Ponty argued that the body is the subject of experience — the ground from which any world appears. His Phenomenology of Perception (1945) developed detailed analyses of bodily intentionality, motor skill, perceptual meaning, and the pre-reflective cogito, and has become the foundational text for enactive, embodied, and 4E approaches to cognition. Merleau-Ponty died young, at 53, but his influence on contemporary philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and AI critique has continued to grow.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Merleau-Ponty studied at the École Normale Supérieure alongside Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, and his philosophical formation was shaped by the interwar French reception of Husserl, Heidegger, and Gestalt psychology. His early The Structure of Behavior (1942) critiqued behaviorism and
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