GE 113 - Understanding The Self PDF

Summary

This document is about the different perspectives of philosophers on the concept of the self. It explores ideas of philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, St. Augustine, Rene Descartes, John Locke, David Hume, Immanuel Kant, Gilbert Ryle, Paul Churchland, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. The document details their theories and arguments on the nature and definition of the self.

Full Transcript

LESSON 1 THE SELF ACCORDING TO PHILOSOPHERS SOCRATES  “Socratic Method” - where an idea is tested by asking series of questions to determine underlying beliefs and the extent of knowledge to guide the person toward better understanding  Most quoted phrase “The unexamined l...

LESSON 1 THE SELF ACCORDING TO PHILOSOPHERS SOCRATES  “Socratic Method” - where an idea is tested by asking series of questions to determine underlying beliefs and the extent of knowledge to guide the person toward better understanding  Most quoted phrase “The unexamined life is not worth living” - Only by knowing yourself can you hope to improve your life - Most important thing in life is the state of your Soul SOCRATES  2 kinds of existence - Visible > it changes; seen by the naked eye like the body - Invisible > constant; the mind & the soul  What is the Goal - To be happy - Virtue is defined as moral excellence  Believed that the most important thing in life is the state of an individual’s soul. PLATO A student of Socrates Philosophical Approach: “Collection and Division” - Deductive Approach Theory of Forms 1. World of Forms – permanence/perfection 2. World of Senses – unreal world PLATO  Soul is considered as devine aspect of human being - Consists of 3 parts: 1. The appetitve (sensual) 2. The rational (reasoning) 3. The spirited (feeling) ST. AUGUSTINE  The human being is both a soul and body - Body Body possessed senses - Soul It is able to be aware of itself It recognizes itself as a holistic one It is aware of its unity ST. AUGUSTINE  CITY OF GOD - one of the most influential works of the Middle Ages 1. City of God - an ideal of the future, heavenly paradise, where good would dominate, true justice 2. City of Men - deeply flawed, money can never accurately track virtue Believed that human being is both a soul and body. RENE DESCARTES  Father of the modern Western Philosophy  Use of REASON to describe, predict, and understand natural phenomena  Hyperbolic Doubt  Cogito Ergo Sum “I think therefore I am”  Believed that the soul is distinct from the body. JOHN LOCKE  Our identity is not locked in mind, soul or body only but also MEMORY  Identity is explained in terms of psychological connection between life stages to be founded on consciousness.  TABULA RASA > Blank Slate DAVID HUME  Influenced by Empiricism  Bundle theory - collection of impressions - Impressions - vivid, products of direct experience - Ideas - copy of impressions  asserted that “self” does not exist; instead, he stressed that perceptions are only active for as long as an individual is conscious. IMMANUEL KANT  Intelligence in a man synthesizes all knowledge and experience  Two kinds of consciousness of self (rationality): i. Consciousness of oneself and one’s psychological states in inner sense ii. Consciousness of oneself and one’s states by performing acts of apperception IMMANUEL KANT  Two components of the “self”: i. Inner self - The “self” by which you are aware of alternations in your own state. ii. Outer self - It includes your senses and the physical world.  Believed that self is not in the body, and he stressed that the body and its qualities are rooted to the self SIGMUND FREUD  Psychoanalysis  Instincts: Eros (sex) and Thanatos (aggression)  3 Provinces of the mind Id - pleasure Ego - reality Superego- idealistic The MIND is an iceberg The Id and Superego are the below the surface Only the ego is on the conscious GILBERT RYLE  Denies the existence of the mind  Behavior of the person truly matters  Your actions define your own concept of “self” PAUL CHURCHLAND  His philosophy stands on a materialistic view  If something can be seen, felt, heard, touched, or tasted, then it exists MAURICE MERLEAU-PONTY  His idea of the “self” is an embodied subjectivity  Subjectivity, is an entity that possesses conscious experiences such as perspectives, feelings, beliefs, and desires.  Dismissed the Cartesian Dualism

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