METODO

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

147751

(1989) Phenomenology and beyond, Dordrecht, Springer.

The self and its language

Harold Durfee, David F T Rodier

pp. 1-10

It is the paradoxes, ambiguities, tensions, divergencies, conundrums and theoretical problems created by the personal pronoun "I" which are the focus of this collection of original essays. For in that simple and all too familiar "I" we are introduced at least to two problems. In that simple letter we encounter the grand confusion regarding subjectivity which has dominated contemporary philosophy from DesCartes to Foucault. Perhaps we are our own greatest problem. DesCartes' cogito, Hume's difficulties with an empirical subject, Kant's transcendental ego, Hegel's absolute subject, Husserl's radical Cartesianism, Wittgenstein's self on the edge of the "sprachwelt," Sartre's "pour-soi," and Foucault's funeral eulogy over the death of the subject all testify to the centrality of the problematic of the "I" in modern thought.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-1055-3_1

Full citation:

Durfee, H. , Rodier, D.F.T. (1989)., The self and its language, in H. Durfee & D. F. T. Rodier (eds.), Phenomenology and beyond, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 1-10.

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