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The purpose of this international, two-day meeting wasÌýto consider alignments between intellectual activity in the German-speaking world between 1750 and 1830, and the findings of modern cognitive science, which posit integration between the mental and the physical in processes of acquiring knowledge. Participants spokeÌýon a range of topics, from literature (Goethe, Kleist, Klopstock) and philosophy (Herder, Schopenhauer) to music, and there wereÌýopportunities for open discussion of the term 'embodied cognition'.