Self-knowledge and the Self

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Routledge, 2000 - Psychology - 193 pages
This work poses the question of whether it is really possible to know ourselves as we really are and illuminates issues about the nature of self-identity that have fundamental importance in moral psychology, epistemology and literary criticism. David Jopling asserts that self-knowledge is a dynamic process which is only possible in interaction with other selves. In other words, we know ourselves insofar as we are known by others - and we learn to answer the question Who am I? not by hermit-like withdrawal from society but through face to face dialogue with other people who have widely differing sensibilities and outlooks than we do. The book focuses on four major accounts of self-knowledge: the philosophical psychology of Stuart Hampshire, the existential-phenomenological philosophical psychology of Jean-Paul Sartre, the neo-pragmatist philosophical psychology of Richard Rorty, and dialogical philosophical psychology. Along the way, and by way of illustration, the book engages themes in literature, drama and psychology.

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About the author (2000)

Jopling is Associate Professor of Philosophy at York University in Ontario.

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