Socrates, Plato, and Descartes viewed self as dualistic, composed of both body and soul/mind. Hume disagreed and saw self as a bundle of impressions and experiences. Kant recognized experiences shape self but believed human reason organizes those experiences. Ryle focused on behavior as the manifestation of self. Merleau-Ponty rejected separating mind and body, believing they are intertwined and both give humans a sense of self. Of these views, Merleau-Ponty's perspective that mind and body cannot be separated and both contribute to one's sense of self aligns most closely with my own understanding of the holistic, integrated nature of self.
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Understanding The Self
Socrates, Plato, and Descartes viewed self as dualistic, composed of both body and soul/mind. Hume disagreed and saw self as a bundle of impressions and experiences. Kant recognized experiences shape self but believed human reason organizes those experiences. Ryle focused on behavior as the manifestation of self. Merleau-Ponty rejected separating mind and body, believing they are intertwined and both give humans a sense of self. Of these views, Merleau-Ponty's perspective that mind and body cannot be separated and both contribute to one's sense of self aligns most closely with my own understanding of the holistic, integrated nature of self.
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The Philosophical
View of Self Self in Philosophical Perspective SOCRATES
Socrates argued that self is
dualistic, as it is composed of body and soul, where body is characterized as imperfect and impermanent and soul as perfect and permanent. SOCRATES (cont.)
To know yourself; to bring his inner self to
life “The man who does not follow good fails to do so because he does not recognize it.”
Virtue – deepest and most basic
propensity of man Self-knowledge – source of all wisdom PLATO Plato, who was a student of Socrates, supported his teacher’s idea about the dualistic nature of man.
He also expounded on Socrates’ idea of soul,
suggesting that soul has three components which have to work harmoniously to be able to live a virtuous and just life:
Rational soul – governs human thought processes
Spirited soul – responsible for emotions Appetitive soul – controls human’s basic drives and desires RENE DESCARTES
Descartes also conceived of the human
person as a having a body and mind.
He claimed that there is so much that we
should doubt and if something is so clear and lucid as not to be doubted, then that’s the only time that one should believe. Thus, he is famous for quoting the line, “Cogito Ergo Sum” which means “I think, therefore I am.” RENE DESCARTES (cont.) For him, self is a combination of two distinct entities:
Cogito – the part of the self that thinks,
which is the mind Extenza – the extension of the mind, which is the body
For him too, while a human person has the
body, what makes man a man is his mind. DAVID HUME Hume disagreed with all the other aforementioned philosophers and contented that one can only know what comes from the senses and experiences.
He fosters the idea that man can only attain
knowledge by actually experiencing it. To him, self is nothing else but a bundle of impressions and self can also be categorized into two – impressions and ideas. DAVID HUME (cont.)
Whereas impressions come about through
sensation or what one directly experiences, ideas come about through imagination.
In actuality, what one thinks of as a self is
simply a combination of a person’s overall experiences. IMMANUEL KANT
Recognized and supported Hume’s
contention of self. He agreed that everything starts with experiences including perceptions and sensation of impressions. However he believes that self is intelligent and is rational.
We humans are not merely a product of our
experiences, but of our selected and organized experiences. IMMANUEL KANT (cont.)
There is a mind that regulates and organizes
our experiences. We have human reason that gives us the capacity to make judgment on all our experiences. He went further by saying that self is not only personality but also the seat of knowledge. GILBERT RYLE
Ryle argued that what truly matters is the
behavior that a person manifests in his day-to-day life.
He focuses his attention primarily on
human behavior. From his perspective, 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. MAURICE MERLEAU-PONTY He declared that the mind-body bifurcation is an invalid problem.
To him, body and mind are so intertwined
that they cannot be separated from one another. Both give humans a sense of self.
A person’s body, thoughts and emotions are
all one. Now, with all these seven (7) Philosophical View of Self, which is compatible with your own understanding and concept of self? Explain. ASSIGNMENT