
Dr. Drew Leder has written extensively on the philosophy of the body, using a phenomenological approach influenced by Merleau-Ponty and other 20th century Continental philosophers. . His most significant work in this area is The Absent Body (U. Of Chicago, 1990) which has been termed "fascinating," "highly important," "stylistically lucid," "intensely illuminating," "a major contribution." (see below).
Having an M.D., as well as
philosophical training, Dr. Leder's work in this area has often
focused on bodily experience in health and illness, and the way
in which medical interventions interpret and transform our relation
to the body. He is critical of the Cartesian mind-body dualism
and scientism that underlies much of contemporary Western medicine,
and proposes a more holistic, yet rigorous, alternative. In addition
to The Absent Body, Dr. Leder is the editor of The Body
in Medical Thought and Practice (Kluwer, 1992), and assistant
editor of the Encyclopedia of Bioethics (Macmillan, 1995).
See his C.V. (under "About Dr. Leder") for a more complete
listing of his many articles and publications on related topics.
THE ABSENT BODY by Drew
Leder (University of Chicago, 1990)
This fascinating look at the human body reveals those ways in
which our bodies are absent in daily life, whether forgotten,
alien, uncontrollable, or obscured. Drew Leder studies the ways
in which bodily phenomena manifest structures of concealment and
alienation. He then presents a highly original critique of Cartesian
dualism, arguing that it is based upon, but misinterprets, our
everyday experience.
A Sample of Reviews and Comments
The Absent Body is a highly important new book....Leder
interweaves direct personal observation and medically sound fact
with philosophically astute analysis to achieve a novel perspective
on a subject that should interest physicians and philosophers
alike. The Absent Body is indeed a major contribution to
both traditional philosophy and frontier medicine.
Peter Jucovy, M.D,. in the Journal of General Internal Medicine
The Absent Body takes the reader to a region which previous
philosophers have feared to enter: the inner, visceral body that
is absent from conscious experience. An original and daring venture
in phenomenology, this book invites us to rethink the bodily basis
of our life. It plumbs the depth of human being-in-the-world in
intensely illuminating ways.
Edward S. Casey, State University of New York at Stony Brook
The Absent Body makes fascinating reading for anyone interested
in the ways in which bodily experience shapes contemporary attitudes
toward women.
Linda LeMoncheck, in the APA Newsletter on Feminism
This is an important book for anyone wondering what the East can
realistically teach us and how we can practically overcome the
pervasive influence of our inherited Cartesian ideology.
Spectrum Review
Leder's description and analysis of `absence' as dysfunction
is the uniquely original and markedly imaginative accomplishment
of this work. He refigures and consolidates phenomenological literature
of the lived body by the likes of Marcel, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty,
and Strauss in such a manner that a new perspective emerges. Stylistically
lucid and straightforward, The Absent Body is in every
respect a significant contribution to the growing literature on
embodiment.
Calvin O. Schrag, Purdue University
Leder's detailed study of the ecstatic/recessive structure of
embodiment is a significant and original contribution. Demonstrating
real insight into the mutual relation between medical and phenomenological
themes regarding the body and embodiment, as well as the underlying
problematic of Cartesian thought, Leder's book is an important
accomplishment. His analysis of the close connections among the
structures of the lived body and their cultural elaborations is
especially rewarding. I highly recommend it as among the best
and most comprehensive studies of the crucial phenomenon of embodiment.
Richard M. Zaner, Vanderbilt University Medical Center