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Glossary›Embodied Cognition

Glossary

Embodied Cognition

A research framework in cognitive science arguing that thinking is shaped by the body's physical form and sensorimotor experiences, not just brain computation.

What is Embodied Cognition?

Embodied cognition is a research program that challenges traditional computational views of the mind by emphasizing that an agent’s physical body and its interactions with the environment constitute or contribute to cognition in ways that require a new framework for investigation. The theory explores the relationship between the brain, the body, and the environment, positing that cognitive processes are significantly influenced by bodily experiences. Rather than treating the mind as software running on the hardware of the brain, embodied cognition holds that perception, memory, language, and reasoning are fundamentally grounded in sensorimotor systems.

The framework represents a departure from Cartesian dualism and the computational theory of mind that dominated mid-20th-century cognitive science. The general theory contends that cognitive processes develop when a tightly coupled system emerges from real-time, goal-directed interactions between organisms and their environment. This means that thinking is not solely a matter of symbol manipulation occurring inside the skull, but is instead distributed across brain, body, and world.

Origins & Lineage

Ideas about embodied cognition began to develop in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The movement drew inspiration from phenomenological philosophy, particularly the works of phenomenologists like Martin Heidegger, Edmund Husserl, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology of Perception (1945) argued that perception is an active bodily engagement with the world, anticipating the “Embodied Cognition” revolution by 50 years.

Three landmark publications provide a historical anchor for understanding early work: George Lakoff and Mark Johnson’s Metaphors We Live By (1980), the enactive perspective developed by Francisco Varela, Evan Thompson, and Eleanor Rosch in The Embodied Mind (1991), and Andy Clark’s Being There: Putting Mind, World, and Body Back Together (1997). Lakoff and his collaborators promoted the embodiment thesis within linguistics, providing evidence suggesting that people use their understanding of familiar physical objects, actions, and situations to understand other domains.

Lawrence Barsalou’s Perceptual Symbol Systems (1999) offered an influential psychological model, proposing that grounded cognition refers to the belief that simulations within specific sensory systems, bodily states, and situated action mediate all cognitive processing. Andy Clark and David Chalmers proposed the Extended Mind thesis in 1998, describing it as “active externalism, based on the active role of the environment in driving cognitive processes.”

How It’s Practiced

Embodied cognition manifests in both research methodologies and applied practices. In laboratory settings, researchers study how bodily states influence cognitive tasks—examining, for example, how physical warmth affects social judgment or how gesture facilitates problem-solving. Barsalou’s idea of simulation proposes that cognition involves “the re-enactment of perceptual, motor, and introspective states acquired during experience with the world, body, and mind.”

In contemplative and somatic contexts, embodied cognition principles inform practices that cultivate bodily awareness as a path to understanding mind. The cultivation of interoceptive, proprioceptive and kinesthetic awareness is said to lie at the core of many movement-based contemplative practices such as Yoga, Qigong, and Tai Chi, and likely plays a key role in modern somatic therapeutic techniques such as the Feldenkrais Method and the Alexander Technique. These practices operate on the premise that directing attention to bodily sensations can reveal the inseparability of body and mind.

Cognitive neuroscience has witnessed a shift from predominantly disembodied and computational views of the mind, to more embodied and situated views that postulate mental functions cannot be fully understood without reference to the physical body and the environment.

Embodied Cognition Today

Contemporary embodied cognition spans multiple disciplines. In neuroscience, researchers investigate how motor cortex activity contributes to language comprehension and how bodily rhythms affect perception. In robotics and artificial intelligence, embodied approaches design systems that learn through sensorimotor interaction rather than pre-programmed rules. In education, embodied learning methods use physical movement and gesture to teach abstract concepts.

The framework has expanded into “4E cognition”—embodied, embedded, enactive, and extended—acknowledging that cognition is situated in ecological contexts and may extend beyond the biological organism. Seekers encounter these ideas through movement-based workshops, somatic therapy modalities, contemplative neuroscience research programs, and body-centered psychotherapy approaches that integrate phenomenological and scientific perspectives.

Common Misconceptions

Embodied cognition is not the claim that the body is merely an input device for the brain. In neuroscience, the phrase refers to the body being an active part of cognition, not merely something that informs the brain’s cognitive processes. The position is more radical: bodily structures and processes are constitutive of cognition, not simply causal influences upon it.

It does not deny that abstract thought exists or that symbolic reasoning occurs. Rather, it argues that even abstract concepts are grounded in embodied experience through metaphorical mapping. All cognition is based on the knowledge that comes from the body and other disciplines are mapped onto humans’ embodied knowledge using conceptual metaphor and image schema.

Embodied cognition is also not anti-brain. It does not minimize the importance of neural processing but contextualizes it within a larger system involving body and environment. The disagreement is with brain-bound, computationalist models, not with neuroscience itself.

How to Begin

For theoretical grounding, begin with Francisco Varela, Evan Thompson, and Eleanor Rosch’s The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience (1991), which bridges cognitive science and Buddhist phenomenology. Andy Clark’s Being There (1997) offers an accessible philosophical introduction, while Lawrence Barsalou’s work provides empirical foundations.

For experiential exploration, investigate somatic practices that cultivate bodily awareness: Feldenkrais Method lessons, Alexander Technique instruction, or contemplative movement classes in Tai Chi or Qigong. Sitting meditation practices that emphasize body scanning—such as vipassana or mindfulness-based stress reduction—provide direct encounter with the interdependence of bodily sensation and mental activity. Academic programs in cognitive science, neurophenomenology, or contemplative studies now integrate embodied cognition frameworks with first-person methodologies.

Related terms

somatic experiencingphenomenologyenactivismcontemplative neurosciencemindfulnessinteroception
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