Relations (1)
related 2.00 — strongly supporting 3 facts
The concepts are related because the sense of ownership is defined as the specific cognitive and phenomenological experience of one's own body, as discussed in the reductive account by José Luis Bermúdez [1] and the research of Frédérique de Vignemont [2]. Furthermore, this sense of ownership serves as a fundamental boundary that explains why individuals cannot experience sensations or pain located in another person's body [3].
Facts (3)
Sources
Self-Consciousness - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu 3 facts
perspectiveJosé Luis Bermúdez (2011) argues for a reductive account of the sense of ownership over one's own body, consisting of the phenomenology of the spatial location of bodily sensations combined with the disposition to judge the body in which they occur as one's own.
referenceFrédérique de Vignemont investigates the sense of ownership of one's own body in her 2007 paper 'Habeas Corpus: The Sense of Ownership of One’s Own Body'.
claimThe 'sense of ownership' helps explain why it is difficult to conceive of experiencing a thought located in another person's mind or pain located in another person's body.