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The conclusion returns to Charlotte Brontë to consider why Victorian authors might have preferred to explore pre-reflective experiences through episodes of getting lost rather than through the technique of stream-of-consciousness narration. The conclusion also addresses more directly the disturbing resemblance of strategic confusion to the willful ignorance that enables white people to uphold oppressive norms.
This response offers a brief overview of Gallagher’s chapter, and then questions it on three specific points: reflective versus pre-reflective accounts of the ownership of our body, the extension of this sense of ownership to cognitive and affective realms, and the basis for this sense of ownership in the very fabric of our experiences. The commentary ends with a suggestion on how the phenomenological approach can contribute to psychiatry, both in the clinic and in the lab.
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