Week 8 Intersubjectivity
Week 8 Intersubjectivity
Week 8 Intersubjectivity
Intersubjectivity
SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS IS SUB-EXISTENT. THE SELF ONLY EXISTS IN SO FAR AS IT TREATS ITSELF
AS BEING FOR ANOTHER, WITH REFERENCE TO ANOTHER.
- GABRIEL MARCEL
ENTRY POINT
Do you agree or do not agree with the statement, “People need people.” Articulate your
stand in not more than five sentences,
Intersubjectivity of Human Beings
As social beings, communication among humans is a necessity. It does not only transform
the social context but also their perspective on existence and its meaning. Since
communication is a necessity toward intersubjectivity, it also becomes a means towards
meaningful existence. It is through constant communication that one can assert his/her
existence. One’s existence is manifested through the existence of others. The existence of
each person is irreplaceable. One cannot replace the existence of the other for it is unique
for each person. As Gabriel Marcel puts it:
Not only do we have a right to assert that others exist, existence can be attributed only to
others, and in virtue of their otherness, and that I cannot think of myself as existing except in
so far as I conceive of myself as not being the others; and so as other than them. I would go
so far as to say that it is of the essence of the other to exist. (Marcel 2007, 104)
Intersubjectivity of Human Beings
In this context of constant communication, human beings give name to the world;
consequently, they transform and humanize it. Dialogue imposes itself as the way by
which they achieve significance as social beings. Thus, it is an existential necessity. Since
dialogue is the encounter in which the united reflection and action of the dialoguer’s are
addressed to the world, this dialogue cannot be reduced to the act of one person’s
depositing ideas on another, nor can it become a simple exchange of ideas to be consumed
by discussants (Freire 1970, 77) It is a dialogue between or among thinking and acting
persons who continuously unveil, discover and create themselves. The content of such
dialogue is not only the external things that they have experienced, but everything
concerning each person’s being.
Intersubjectivity of Human Beings
The social interaction among the family members of the family can be concretely
experienced in the Filipino family in the spirit of “sakop”. Filipino philosophy
believes that “sakop” reveals the mechanisms of Filipino family in establishing
wider family relations which result to extended family ties. This system becomes
a medium or means of determining the seminal character of every member of the
family. In such communicative situation or dialogue in the family, every member
projects the perennial values, beliefs and the world view of the family. Each
person carries the whole being and collective consciousness of the family.
Paolo Freire
Freire is famous for his Pedagogy of the
Oppressed, a radical theory of education that
encourages to question things that prevents
people and society to gain the quality of life
they want.
Check Point
A Short Discourse
What is your comment of this statement, “Only in interhuman that you can become and
realize yourself?”
Reflect Zone
Your brother or sister comes to you with a frown face, and he/she grumbles against your
mother. What will you do so that your sibling and your mother will enter into a genuine
dialogue and solve their differences.
The Dimensions of a
Nonrelational Self
MAN CANNOT BECOME HIMSELF IN ISOLATION. – KARL JASPERS
The Dimensions of a Nonrelational Self
Based on your own observation and experience, share your own point of view why there are
persons who will choose to stop communicating or relating with other people. Summarize
your sharing in two points.
1. ________________________________________________________________________
2. ________________________________________________________________________
A. The Self in Isolation
Human being lives in isolation when he/she does not recognize the existence of
other human beings. He/she lives in a community but he/she does not establish
vocative situation with others. He/she does not establish relational interaction
that leads to open communication with others.
Another form of isolation of self is when human being consciously leaves the
communicative situation. Consequently, human being cannot unveil and discover
himself/herself. This is a rupture of the possibility of life of communion. Human
being who is not in communion with the other tries to grasp his/her life alone.
A. The Self in Isolation
Manipulation between or among person occurs when one says to the other
“I create your world and you must only think, feel and act within its
boundary. Your world view and your understanding about the world are
according to the world that I have created for you. You act according to
the image that I set. As you do it, I find satisfaction and security.”
Intersubjectivity is impossible to unfold in this kind of relationship (Karl
Jaspers 1956, 84). Those who are involved can never live in truth. Open
communication and vocative situation can never be established.
C. The Self in the Realm of Manipulation
In this situation, a human being sees the other person as a mere “thing or
it.” He/she does not recognize the very being of the other. He/she controls
the other as an object. He/she relates with the other for personal gain and
development. This would result to manipulative relationship. The
freedom to express and unveil one’s uniqueness and the truth of oneself
are not manifested and shared. Thus, in this kind of relationship, growth
or true personal development is impossible to attain. One is corrupted by
his/her own selfishness. And the other is yielded to live in a manipulative
and distorted world.
C. The Self in the Realm of Manipulation
Since the “I” sees the other as an object that satisfies his/her appetitive desires,
the other person becomes an object of satisfaction for sexual desire or material
desire. The “I” objectifies the other self-satisfaction at the expense of the other.
He/she can easily dispose the other as an “it”. (Martin Buber 1970). He/she
disposes the other if the other can no longer give him/her satisfaction. It is like
one throwing a gadget after he/she gets a new one that gives his/her immediate
satisfaction. It is like replacing an I-pod 5 with an I-pod 6. the I-pod 5 can now
be disposed or given to another or thrown into the trash can. It can no longer
give satisfaction that the owner desires.
C. The Self in the Realm of Manipulation
Nonrelational self can also be experienced in certain corporate organization. When one or
group of people manipulates all the members of an association by not giving information
that transpires in an assembly meeting, or by using their power to appoint a member of
the Commission on Elections (COMELEC), and appointing a disqualified candidate to
become a member of the Board of Trustees. This is not only illegal but also not moral.
This group deceives the members of the association by calling for an assembly meeting
and using people who support their own personal interest. These few individuals forced
those who have attended the assembly to nullify what the authorized persons have
proclaimed. In this situation, open communications or dialogue is impossible to prosper,
which is a vital aspect in establishing and enriching a just association.
C. The Self in the Realm of Manipulation
In such situation, the subject of every person who attends the assembly is lost.
He/she is unable to express his/her own freedom, which gives him/her the power
to participate in the values which bind him/her to others. One is identified with
all. There is an unquestioning existence (Karl Jaspers, Philosophy, vol. 3, 1970,
48). The subject of the person is lost because he/she is treated as an object. A
person interacts with the other persons as a mere thing for use. As pseudo-
authority exploits pseudo power, the consciousness of each member of the
association is distorted and misled for the member to accept a pseudo authority.
As a result, each member of the association is reduced to a point, exploitable,
nothing more.
D. The Self in the Realm of Selfishness
The “I” is the center of relationship. In this kind of relationship, the “I” looks at the other
persons as means for personal growth. From his/her vantage point, he/she believes that
he/she can grow in selfishness. However, this will result to superficiality. Selfishness
hinders a person from sharing his/her being. He/she sees the other as an empty vessel of
values and of meaning. Selfishness blinds a person from seeing the other source of unique
world, values and meaning that can possibly enrich his/her being. Selfishness hinders the
person from opening himself/herself and be transparent to the other for true communion
of worlds, meanings, values and self-beings (Buber 2000). Selfishness hinders him/her
from being transparent to the other. Only through the process of transparency can his/her
personal wants and desires be laid bare.
Martin Buber
(1875 – 1975)
As an existentialist Jewish Philosopher,
Buber in his groundbreaking work, I and
Thou (1952) outlines the “essentials” that
differentiate it from any “I-It” relationship.
In the I-Thou, every human relationship is
essentially an interhuman relationship.
Karl Jaspers
Karl Jaspers is one of the influential German
thinkers of the twentieth century. He was
born in Oldenburg, Germany and died in
February 1969. Jasper’s primary focus was
the concrete individual person. He believes
that personal experience is human being’s
fundamental source of truth about reality.
Reflect Zone
Being Responsive
A friend approached and confided in you that her parents were at the brink of separation.
This situation has caused pain and confusion to your friend. She told you that her world was
about to explode. What will you say or do?