physico-mental

Adjective

 * 1) Having both physical and mental aspects; involving both the body and the mind; psychosomatic.
 * 2) * 1997: Georg Meggle [ed.], ἀναλύωμεν — Analyōmen 2: Proceedings of the 2nd Conference “Perspectives in Analytical Philosophy”, page 115 (Walter de Gruyter; ISBN 3110152576, 978-3110152579)
 * Like Nagel, with his “physico-mental intimacy” and his variability of relations, Merleau-Ponty also searches for new forms of physico-mental relations. He postulates a “circular causality” as a “chiasm” between mental states and physico-mental conditions. These terms characterize physico-mental relations as forms of organization within the structures of the “lived body” such that physico-chemical and mental states appear as the interior and the exterior, the concave and the convex side of a non-visible hinge, the “lived body” (Merleau-Ponty 1968, 295).