When you’re playing a sport… wait, maybe you don’t… okay, when you’re playing an instrum—hm. Surely there is a kinesthetic skill you occasionally perform, during which your locus of identity is not in your articulatory loop? (If not, fixing that might be high value?) And you can imagine being in states similar to that much of the time? I would imagine intense computer programming sessions would be more kinesthetic than verbal. Comment linked to hints at what my default thinking process is like.
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 you’re playing a sport… wait, maybe you don’t… okay, when you’re playing an instrum—hm. Surely there is a kinesthetic skill you occasionally perform, during which your locus of identity is not in your articulatory loop? (If not, fixing that might be high value?) And you can imagine being in states similar to that much of the time? I would imagine intense computer programming sessions would be more kinesthetic than verbal. Comment linked to hints at what my default thinking process is like.
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.