1. Enactivism: Embodied cognition, sense‐making, and nursing.
- Author
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McCaffrey, Graham
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN physiology , *NURSING theory , *COGNITIVE testing , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *NURSING , *NEUROSCIENCES , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PHILOSOPHY of nursing , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *THEORY , *PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *PHENOMENOLOGY - Abstract
Enactivism is a branch of embodied cognition theory that argues for a highly distributed model of cognition as a sense‐making process involving brain, body, environment, and subjective experience. It is a theoretical framework with potential value for nursing since it offers an integrated framework for human sense‐making that includes physiological and psychological factors as well as the primary experience of subjective perceptions. This paper presents an introduction to the background and main tenets of enactivist theory. These are discussed in relation to nursing, and mental health nursing to argue for the relevance of enactivism in nursing knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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