Books > Social sciences > Psychology > The self, ego, identity, personality
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Know Thyself - An Essay on Social Personalism (Hardcover)
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Know Thyself - An Essay on Social Personalism (Hardcover)
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Know Thyself: An Essay in Social Personalism proposes that social
Personalism can best provide for self-knowledge. In the West,
self-knowledge has been sought within the framework of two dominant
intellectual traditions, order and the emerging self. On the one
hand, ancient and medieval philosophers living in an orderly
hierarchical society, governed by honor and shame, and bolstered by
the metaphysics of being and rationalism, believed persons gain
self-knowledge through uniting with the ground of their being; once
united they would understand what they are, what they are to be,
and what they are to do. On the other hand, Renaissance and modern
thinkers such as Pico della Mirandola, Copernicus, Descartes,
Locke, and Kant shattered the great achievement of the high middle
ages and bequeathed to posterity an emerging self in a splintered
world. Continuing their search for self-knowledge, the moderns
found themselves faced with the dualism of the emerging self of the
Renaissance and the natural world as understood by modern
scientists. New problems spun out of this dualism, including the
mind-body problem; the other minds problem; free will and
determinism; the nature and possibility of social relationships;
values, moral norms and their relationship to the natural and
social worlds; and the relationships between science and religion.
Finding self-knowledge among these splinters without a guiding
orientation has proven difficult. Even though luminaries such as
Spinoza, Berkeley, and Hegel attempted to bring order to the
sundered elements, their attempts proved unsatisfactory. We contend
that neither order nor the emerging self can adequately provide for
self-knowledge. Since those culturally embodied "master narratives"
lead us to an impasse, we turn to social Personalism.
Self-knowledge developed in this book shows how persons in relation
to the Personal learn who they are, what they are to become, and
what they must do to achieve that goal. It also shows that the
achievement of self-knowledge is supported by a natural, social,
and cultural environment rooted in trust. In this humane and timely
discussion, Thomas O. Buford offers a personalist understanding of
self-knowledge that avoids the impersonalisms that erode the
dignity of persons and their moral life which characterize modern
life.
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