Abstract
This article develops a post-Cartesian, embodied conception of psychological agency. In contrast to reductionist approaches to agency in traditional intrapsychic and interpersonal psychoanalytic models, I present psychological agency as a fundamentally embodied, affective, and contextualized process. As such, I maintain that the multidimensional nature of agency can only truly be captured from an interdisciplinary approach that draws equally psychoanalysis, phenomenological philosophy, and neuroscience.
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