Books > Social sciences > Psychology > The self, ego, identity, personality
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Selves, People and Persons - What Does it Mean to be a Self? (Hardcover)
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Selves, People and Persons - What Does it Mean to be a Self? (Hardcover)
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The meaning of selfhood has become an urgent question, largely in
reaction to the radical individualism in which many modern Western
notions of selfhood have been cast. The 11 contributors to "Selves,
People, and Persons" aim to reshape fundamental ideas of the self
in such varied fields as theology, biology, psychoanalysis and
political philosophy. Nearly all of them agree that selves are
always to be understood in relation to the communities of which
they are a part. The first section of the book focuses on basic
issues in the philosophy of selfhood. Erazim Kohak's title essay
explores American personalism while Harold H. Oliver argues that a
self is always in the act of relation to some other. Lawrence E.
Cahoone counters with reflections on the limits of this social and
rational notion of selfhood and Edward W. James sketches a holistic
view of the self in which the "either/or" of dualism can be
transformed by a "both/and". The second group deals with selfhood
in various cultures, beginning with Eliot Deutsch's exploration of
how each tradition can enlarge its understanding of selfhood by
incorporating elements from other traditions. John B. Carman
examines the role of the self in Hindu "Bhakti", and Livia Kohn
explores the role of spontaneity in Chinese views of selfhood. The
problem of selfhood in theology, biology, psychoanlaysis and
political theory comprises the final section: Krister Stendahl
discusses the idea that our selfhood is understood primarily in
terms of God's selfhood; Alfred I. Tauber examines biological ideas
of organism in the work of Elie Metchnikoff; John E. Mack proposes
that a spiritual point of view is now required in order to fully
understand the psyche; and Bhikhu Parekh examines how the issue of
violence is formulated and debated in liberal democracies.
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