When I’m playing music or martial arts, and I’m doing it well, I’m usually in a state of flow—not exactly self-aware in the way I usually think of it.
When I’m working inside a computer or motorcycle, I think I’m less self-aware, and what I’m aware of is my manipulating actuators, and the objects than I need to manipulate, and what I need to do to them.
When I’m sitting in my armchair, thinking “who am I?” this is almost entirely symbolic, and I feel more self-aware than at the other times.
So, I think having my locus of identity in my articulatory loop is correlated with having a strong sense of identity.
I’m not sure whether my sense of identity would be weaker there, and stronger in a state of kinesthetic flow, if I spent more time sparring than sitting.
When I’m playing music or martial arts, and I’m doing it well, I’m usually in a state of flow—not exactly self-aware in the way I usually think of it.
When I’m working inside a computer or motorcycle, I think I’m less self-aware, and what I’m aware of is my manipulating actuators, and the objects than I need to manipulate, and what I need to do to them.
When I’m sitting in my armchair, thinking “who am I?” this is almost entirely symbolic, and I feel more self-aware than at the other times.
So, I think having my locus of identity in my articulatory loop is correlated with having a strong sense of identity.
I’m not sure whether my sense of identity would be weaker there, and stronger in a state of kinesthetic flow, if I spent more time sparring than sitting.