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Glossary›Embodied Knowledge

Glossary

Embodied Knowledge

Knowledge held in and accessed through the body's lived experience, sensations, and movement—beyond verbal articulation or abstract concepts.

What is Embodied Knowledge?

Embodied knowledge is a type of knowledge where the body knows how to act—how to ride a bicycle, play an instrument, or sense danger before the mind articulates it. The knowing-subject here is the body itself, not the mind—or more precisely, the knowing subject is the minded-body or embodied-mind. Unlike declarative knowledge that can be spoken or written, embodied knowledge manifests through performance, sensation, and the body’s capacity to respond skillfully to its environment. Embodied knowledge situates intellectual and theoretical insights within the realm of the material world and is sensory, highlighting smell, touch, and taste as well as more commonly noted sights and sounds.

This epistemology resists the Cartesian mind–body split that underlies Enlightenment philosophy and its persistent remnants, including the scientific method and the glorification of objectivity. The body becomes the primary site of intelligence—a repository of wisdom that precedes thought and often exceeds what language can capture.

Origins & Lineage

The notion of embodied knowledge is derived from the phenomenology of the French philosopher, Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908-1961). His 1945 book Phenomenology of Perception expounds his thesis of “the primacy of perception” and established Merleau-Ponty as the pre-eminent philosopher of the body. Merleau-Ponty described embodied knowledge as “knowledge in the hands, which is forthcoming only when bodily effort is made”—a particular type of knowledge which is not distinctly explicit, conscious, mentally representative, or articulated. He also referred to it as ‘knowledge bred of familiarity’ (savoir de familiarité).

Merleau-Ponty built upon the phenomenological foundations of Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) and Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), who examined consciousness and embodied existence. Earlier, scientist and philosopher Michael Polanyi coined the term “tacit knowledge” in 1958 to describe a type of unconscious, embodied and social knowledge that could not be explicitly taught through rules or rote-learning. Polanyi stated that all knowledge is rooted in tacit knowledge.

Merleau-Ponty’s position was one of the primary influences on Francisco Varela, Evan Thompson, and Eleanor Rosch when they published The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience in 1991, inaugurating the enactivist approach to cognitive science. This classic book proposed the “embodied cognition” approach in cognitive science and pioneered the connections between phenomenology and science and between Buddhist practices and science.

How It’s Practiced

The cultivation of interoceptive, proprioceptive and kinesthetic awareness lies at the core of many movement-based contemplative practices such as Yoga, Qigong, and Tai Chi, as well as modern somatic therapeutic techniques such as the Feldenkrais Method and the Alexander Technique. In these practices, practitioners learn to attend to subtle sensations, track internal states, and access intelligence through felt sense rather than conceptual analysis.

Peter A. Levine developed Somatic Experiencing® (SE™) in the late 1960s, a naturalistic and neurobiological approach to healing trauma. In this work, traumatic memory lives in the body as sensation, activation, and procedural patterns, held in posture, breath, and autonomic arousal—often without conscious awareness. Practitioners work with pendulation—oscillating between activation and regulation—and tracking bodily sensations to complete incomplete survival responses.

Buddhist contemplative traditions have long emphasized embodied knowing. The Buddhist tradition articulated this embodied dimension of cognition through the analysis of the five aggregates (skandha), which include not only perception and mental formations but also form (rūpa, material embodiment), recognising that cognitive and physical processes are co-constitutive rather than separable. The practice of vipassanā (insight meditation) aims for the realization of supreme enlightenment through seven types of purity.

Embodied Knowledge Today

Contemporary seekers encounter embodied knowledge through diverse channels. Somatic therapy modalities—including Somatic Experiencing, Hakomi, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, and Body-Mind Centering—are now taught in professional training programs worldwide. Somatic Experiencing has been taught to over 30,000 healers in over 42 countries. Movement practices like contact improvisation, 5Rhythms, authentic movement, and conscious dance explicitly work with embodied wisdom.

Retreats and workshops increasingly integrate contemplative practices with neuroscience education. Second-generation mindfulness-based interventions (SG-MBIs) re-integrate ethical, spiritual, and existential dimensions drawn from Buddhist contemplative traditions, while also engaging contemporary fields such as positive psychology, emphasizing compassion, embodied awareness, and sensitivity to context. Academic programs in somatics, embodied cognition, and neurophenomenology now bridge ancient wisdom and contemporary science.

Common Misconceptions

Embodied knowledge is not simply “listening to your body” or following intuition without discernment. While the body generates and imparts information, bodily information can be ambiguous (hurting may be a sign of healing) or misleading (phantom pain). It requires cultivation, practice, and often guidance to distinguish between reactive patterns and genuine somatic intelligence.

It is not anti-intellectual or opposed to conceptual knowledge. From a phenomenological perspective, all cognition is embodied and interactive and embedded in dynamically changing environments—attention to the way conscious experiences are structured by bodies and environments reveals that there is no substantial distinction between mind and body. Embodied knowledge complements rather than replaces other ways of knowing.

Embodied knowledge is not universally accessible without training. We still lack a refined theoretical account of how tacit knowledge is acquired—to know something tacitly implies a movement from subsidiary to focal awareness. This capacity develops through sustained attention and practice.

How to Begin

Begin with somatic awareness practices: dedicating 10 minutes daily to scanning body sensations without judgment, noticing breath, temperature, tension, and subtle movement impulses. Contemplative practices involve intentionally focusing attention on a particular object, thought, or experience in a way that cultivates greater awareness, insight, and understanding—examples include meditation, yoga, taiji, writing, and various martial arts.

Read foundational texts: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology of Perception (1945) is considered his masterpiece for those interested in philosophical grounding. The Embodied Mind by Varela, Thompson, and Rosch (1991) pioneered connections between phenomenology and science and between Buddhist practices and science. Peter Levine’s books include Waking the Tiger, Healing Trauma (published in over 29 languages) and In an Unspoken Voice, How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness.

Seek embodied instruction: Work with certified practitioners in somatic modalities, attend movement-based meditation retreats, or explore classes in Feldenkrais, Alexander Technique, authentic movement, or trauma-informed yoga. The guidance of experienced teachers helps distinguish between retraumatization and genuine integration.

Related terms

somatic experiencingvipassana meditationphenomenologyinteroceptioncontemplative practicebody mind integration
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