2 - Week 2 - The Self According To Philosophy
2 - Week 2 - The Self According To Philosophy
2 - Week 2 - The Self According To Philosophy
Philosophy
Philosophy is defined as the study of knowledge or wisdom from its Latin roots,
philo (love) and sophia (wisdom). This field is also considered as “The Queen
of All Sciences” because every scientific discipline has philosophical
foundations.
Various thinkers for centuries tried to explain the natural causes of everything
that exist specifically the inquiry on the self preoccupied these philosophers in
the history. The Greek philosophers were the ones who seriously questioned myths
and moved away from them in attempting to understand reality by exercising the art of questioning that
satisfies their curiosity, including the questions about self. The following lecture will present the different
philosophical perspectives and views about self.
Socrates
Plato
St. Augustine
He is considered as the last of the great ancient
philosophers whose ideas were greatly Platonic. In melding
philosophy and religious beliefs together, Augustine has been
characterized as Christianity’s first theologian.
Like Plato, Augustine believed that the physical body is
different from the immortal soul. Early in his philosophical
development he described body as “snare” or “cage” of the soul
and said that the body is a “slave” of the soul he even characterized
that “the soul makes war with the body”. Later on he came to view
the body as “spouse” of the soul, with both attached to one another
by a “natural appetite.” He concluded, “That the body is united
with the soul, so that man may be entire and complete, is a fact we
recognize on the evidence of our own nature.”
Image Source: http://lexchristianorum.blogspot.com/
According to St. Augustine, the human nature is
composed of two realms:
David Hume
He was a Scottish philosopher and also an empiricist.
His claim about self is quite controversial because he
assumed that there is no self! In his essay entitled, “On Personal
Identity” (1739) he said that, if we carefully examine the
contents of [our] experience, we find that there are only two
distinct entities, "impressions" and "ideas".
Impressions are the basic sensations of our experience, the
elemental data of our minds: pain, pleasure, heat, cold,
happiness, grief, fear, exhilaration, and so on.
On the other hand, ideas are copies of impressions that
include thoughts and images that are built up from our primary
impressions through a variety of relationships, but because they
are derivative copies of impressions, they are once removed
from reality.
Image Source: https://www.britannica.com/
Hume considered that the self does not exist because all
of the experiences that a person may have are just perceptions
and this includes the perception of self. None of these perceptions resemble a unified and
permanent self-identity that exists over time.
Sigmund Freud
A well-known Australian psychologist and considered as
the Father and Founder of Psychoanalysis. His influence in
Psychology and therapy is dominant and popular in the 20th to
21st century.
The dualistic view of self by Freud involves the conscious
self and unconscious self.
The conscious self is governed by reality principle. Here,
the self is rational, practical, and appropriate to the social
environment. The conscious self has the task of controlling the
constant pressures of the unconscious self, as its primitive
impulses continually seek for immediate discharge.
The unconscious self is governed by pleasure principle. It
Image Source: https://www.researchgate.net/
Gilbert Ryle
A British analytical philosopher. He was an important
figure in the field of Linguistic Analysis which focused on the
solving of philosophical puzzles through an analysis of
language.
According to Ryle, the self is best understood as a pattern
of behavior, the tendency or disposition for a person to behave
in a certain way in certain circumstances.
He opposed the notable ideas of the previous
philosophers and even claimed that those were results of
confused conceptual thinking he termed, category mistake.
The category mistake happens when we speak about the
self as something independent of the physical body: a purely
Image Source: https://www.jstor.org/
mental entity existing in time but not space
Immanuel Kant
A German Philosopher who made great contribution to
the fields of metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics. Kant is
widely regarded as the greatest philosopher of the modern
period.
Kant maintained that an individual self makes the
experience of the world comprehensible because it is
responsible for synthesizing the discreet data of sense
experience into a meaningful whole.
It is the self that makes consciousness for the person to
make sense of everything. It is the one that help every individual
gain insight and knowledge. If the self failed to do this
synthesizing function, there would be a chaotic and insignificant
collection of sensations.
Image Source: https://mediaethicsmorning.wordpress.com/
Additionally, the self is the product of reason, a regulative
principle because the self regulates experience by making
unified experience possible and unlike Hume, Kant’s self is not the object of consciousness, but it
makes the consciousness understandable and unique.
Transcendental apperception happens when people do not experience self directly, instead as a
unity of all impressions that are organized by the mind through perceptions. Kant concluded that
becoming.
Phenomenology provides a direct description of the human experience which serves to guide man’s
conscious actions. He further added that, the world is a field of perception, and human
consciousness assigns meaning to the world. Thus man cannot separate himself from his
perceptions of the world.
Perception is not purely the result of sensations nor it is purely interpretations. Rather consciousness
is a process that includes sensing as well as interpreting/reasoning.
References/Sources:
Arcega, A M., Cullar, D. S., Evangelista, L. D. & Falculan, L. M. (2018). Understanding the Self. Malabon
City: Mutya Publishing House Inc.
Gazzingan, L. B. et al. (2019). Understanding the Self. Muntinlupa City: Panday-Lahi Publishing House,
Inc.
Alata, E.J.P., Caslib, B.N., Serafica, J.P.J., Pawilen, R.A. (2018). Unsertanding the Self. Rex Book Store
Inc., Sta Mesa Heights, Quezon City, Philippines