← Back to Concept Index
intentional-consciousness
The concept of consciousness as always directed toward an object, where the body is experienced through intentional acts as described by Husserlian phenomenology.
1 chapter across 1 book
Being and Nothingness (1943)Jean-Paul Sartre
Chapter 2: The Body
In Chapter 2: The Body, Sartre explores the phenomenological and existential significance of the body, drawing on philosophical, psychological, and scientific references. He discusses the body not merely as a physical object but as a lived, intentional presence that mediates experience and consciousness, engaging with ideas from Descartes, Husserl, and Gestalt psychology. The chapter also addresses the body’s role in self-awareness, perception, and the interplay between physicality and subjectivity.