Review
In this introduction
you have encountered and experienced the philosophic process. You have learned
that philosophy is the search for wisdom and you have embarked on a personal
quest through a series of exercises. In the process, you have probably realized
that becoming more philosophical is in your best interests for a number of
reasons. Things physical and things philosophical, which may have seemed remote
at the outset, are intricately intertwined in reality, as the examination of
philosophy in action indicated. The study of philosophy in kinesiology is not a
luxury, but an imperative if you are concerned about self-awareness and the
quality of the movement experience. To check your own understanding, you might
want to respond to the following questions:
- In what
ways is philosophy inactive, in what ways active?
- Why
is reacting an important first step in the philosophic process?
- Self-distancing is desirable, but impossible. What are the limits of
your objectivity?
- How can the process of
identification help you to plan your next work-out?
-
Analyzing is a critical process. Does that mean that it is entirely negative in
nature?
- Why is synthesizing described as the soul of
the philosophic process?
- How does the meaning you
find in movement transcend the physical domain?