Understanding The Self PDF
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This document presents various philosophical perspectives on the concept of 'self' from different historical figures, including Socrates, Plato, St. Augustine, and contemporary thinkers like Gilbert Ryle and Paul Churchland. It explores the interplay between the mind, body, and consciousness, highlighting differing viewpoints on the nature of the self across various philosophical schools of thought.
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# Understanding the Self ## Philosophy ### Socrates - Greek philosopher who shaped Western thought. - Never wrote anything, knowledge is through second-hand information. - Known for the Socratic Method, which tests an idea by asking a series of questions to determine underlying beliefs. - Accuse...
# Understanding the Self ## Philosophy ### Socrates - Greek philosopher who shaped Western thought. - Never wrote anything, knowledge is through second-hand information. - Known for the Socratic Method, which tests an idea by asking a series of questions to determine underlying beliefs. - Accused of impiety (lack of reverence for the gods) and corrupting the youth. - Sentenced to death by drinking hemlock. ### Some of Socrates' Ideas: - The soul is immortal. - The care of the soul is the task of philosophy. - Virtue is necessary to attain happiness. - "The unexamined life is not worth living." - Self-knowledge is important for improving your life. - The state of your inner being determines the quality of your life. ### Plato - Student of Socrates. - Wrote the Socratic Dialogue. - Known for his Theory of Forms, asserting the physical world is *not* real. - Believed the soul is the divine aspect of the human being. - The soul consists of three parts: - **Appetitive (sensual):** the element that enjoys sensual experiences. - **Rational (reasoning):** the element that forbids the person to enjoy sensual experiences, that loves truth and should rule over other parts of the soul. - **Spirited (feeling):** the element inclined toward reason but understands the demands of passion. ### St. Augustine - One of the most significant Christian thinkers. - Influenced by Plato’s ideas, including the notion of the "self" as an immaterial soul. - Believed that Forms exist as concepts within the perfect and eternal God. - The soul is capable of scientific thinking, and holds the Truth. - The self is an inner, immaterial “I.” - The soul is distinct from the body, but they are connected. - God is only clear to the mind if one tunes into his/her immaterial self. ### René Descartes - French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist. - Considered the father of modern Western philosophy. - Emphasized the use of reason to understand natural phenomena. - Proposed *doubt* as a principal tool of disciplined inquiry. - **Hyperbolical/metaphysical doubt**: a systematic process of being skeptical about truth. - "Cogito ergo sum" ("I think, therefore I am")—asserted that the body cannot be the foundation for knowledge. - Believed the thinking entity (soul) could exist without the body. - The thinking entity is the source of our identity. ### John Locke - Enlightenment thinker. - Expanded the definition of "self" to include memories. - Believed the "self" is identified with consciousness and memory. - Memories provide a continuity of experience that allows him/her to identify himself/herself as the same person over time. ### David Hume - Fierce opponent of Descartes' Rationalism. - Advocate of Empiricism—believed that knowledge originates from sense experience. - **Bundle Theory**: The self is a collection of different perceptions. - Believed that the self does not have a permanent essence or identity. ### Immanuel Kant - Central figure in modern philosophy. - Believed the human mind creates the structure of human experience. - **Transcendental self**: the self is not in the body. - Knowledge bridges the self and the material world. ### Sigmund Freud - Influential thinker of the 20th century. - Developed psychoanalysis. - Believed the psyche is a complex structure with three components: - **Id:** operates on the pleasure principle. - **Ego:** operates on the reality principle. - **Superego:** incorporates the morals of society. ### Gilbert Ryle - Critiqued Descartes' idea of the mind as distinct from the body. - Rejected the notion of a separate mental world. ### Paul Churchland - Advocated for a materialistic view of the mind—believed that only matter exists. - **Eliminative Materialism**: the claim that folk psychology (common-sense understanding of the mind) is false. - The brain, and not an immaterial mind, gives us our sense of self. ### Maurice Merleau-Ponty - Emphasized the body as a place of knowing. - Believed in an embodied subjectivity--the body is an essential part of the self. - Rejected the Cartesian mind-body dualism, believing the mind and body are intrinsically connected.