Journal of the Philosophy of Sport and Physical Education
Online ISSN : 1884-4553
Print ISSN : 0915-5104
ISSN-L : 0915-5104
Original Articles
The process of transfiguration from “sensations” to “experience” in sports activities :Relying on Moriʼs “experience” theory and Izutsuʼs “structure of consciousness” theory
Chikashi NASUNO
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2025 Volume 47 Issue 1 Pages 51-68

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Abstract

The purpose of this course is to clarify how the repetition of “doing” sports can be involved in our consciousness as a practitionerʼs senses, experiences, and experience, in other words, the process by which things that sports practitioner “experiences” as sensations are accumulated as consciously conscious “experience” and carried into the future as a process of transformation.

First, based on the previous knowledge of “experiences” and “experience” in sports practice, it is clarified that practitioners encounter situations called “dissolution experiences” that break away from the principle of usefulness, synchronized sensitivity to body schemas (physical feelings), transitions in phases (stages) of “experiences” and “experience,” and accumulation of past “experience” and their carry-over into the future.

This process of “accumulation and carrying into the future” is picked up by Moriʼs “experience” theory, who continued to talk about the process of maturation of experience starting with the purification of oneʼs own senses and reinterpreted it as a process from the purification of sensations to the maturation of experience in sports practice.

The following is a summary of the conclusions of this study.

The sports practitioner purifies his or her senses in the process of reaching the stage of non-“essential” segmentation of existence, from the stage of “essential” existence segmentation, in which the surface consciousness is activated, through a single point of no sectioning while opening a deep area. While interacting with each other, it repeatedly self-develops and restructures and is brought into the future.

Through the continuous restructuring of sports practitioners to improve the functionality of their deep consciousness while purifying their own senses through sports practice, a shift to non-“essential” existence segmentation occurs and the world “seen” during sports practice is “transformed”.

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© 2025 Japan Society for the Philosophy of Sport and Physical Education
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