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CONCEPT

Tactile-Kinesthetic Intelligence

The <em>knowledge that lives in the hands</em> — the cognitive capacity built through bodily engagement with resistant material, irreducible to language or propositional form.
Tactile-kinesthetic intelligence is Sheets-Johnstone's name for the cognitive capacity that develops through sustained bodily engagement with resistant material. The potter's hands know the clay. The surgeon's fingers distinguish healthy from diseased tissue by feel. The musician's fingers find the right position on the fretboard through years of practice encoded in muscle memory and proprioceptive calibration. This intelligence is not lesser than propositional knowledge — it is a different and irreducible mode of knowing, producing understanding that cannot be extracted into language, formalized into rules, or transferred to a system that lacks a body. The knowledge is the engagement. Remove the engagement, and the knowledge does not persist in some other form. It ceases to exist.

In The You On AI Field Guide

Sheets-Johnstone's insistence on the irreducibility of tactile-kinesthetic intelligence is one of her most consequential claims. It distinguishes her framework from versions of tacit knowledge (Polanyi) or knowing-how (Ryle) that treat such knowledge as difficult to articulate but in principle capturable. For Sheets-Johnstone, tactile-kinesthetic intelligence is constitutively embodied — it exists only

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