Socrates: The Self From Various Perspectives
Socrates: The Self From Various Perspectives
Socrates: The Self From Various Perspectives
People Behave
NATURE OF THE SELF
Paul Churchland: The Self is the Brain
Maurice Merleau-Ponty: The Self is
Embodied Subjectivity
Physical Self
Changeable, transient and imperfect
Ideal Self
Unchanging, eternal and immortal
SOCRATES
PHILOSOPHY Explains that the essence of the self –
soul – is the immortal entity.
Employs the inquisitive mind to
SOUL strives for wisdom and perfection
discover the ultimate causes,
and reason is the soul’s tool to achieve
reasons, and principles of everything
this exalted state.
“love of wisdom”
He suggests that the man must live an
Desire for truth
examined life a life of purpose and
SELF = SOUL value.
Meaningful and Happy Life = virtuous
Believed that every human possessed
and knows the value of himself that
an immortal soul that survived the
can be achieved through incessant
physical body
soul- searching
Full power of reason on the human
He suggests that what is to be
self:
considered a good act is not good
who we are; who we should be; who
because gods say it is, but is good
we will become
because it is useful to us in our efforts to
Two Dichotomous Realms of Self: be better and happier people.
For example, when you first wake up in the morning and experience your gradually expanding
awareness of where you are and how you feel, what are your first thoughts of the day? Perhaps
something along the lines of “Oh no, it’s time to get up, but I’m still sleepy, but I have an important
appointment that I can’t be late for” and so on. Note that at no point do you doubt that the “I”
you refer to is a single integrated entity, a blending of mental, physical, and emotional structured
around a core identity: yourself. It’s only later, when you’re reading Descartes or discussing the
possibility of reincarnation with a friend that you begin creating ideas such as independent
“minds,” “bodies,” “souls,” or, in the case of Freud, an “unconscious.”