Dennett and Ricoeur on the Narrative Self (Contemporary Studies in Philosophy and the Human Sciences)

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Management number 231627905 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price $18.36 Model Number 231627905
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A central issue in contemporary philosophy is the problem of the self. Is it some kind of real entity or a very convincing illusion? Drawing on the work of two leading philosophers, Daniel Dennett and Paul Ricoeur, philosopher Joan McCarthy examines how each of these thinkers casts the self in narrative terms.McCarthy begins with Dennett''s naturalist objectivist account of the narrative self. Specifically, she considers Dennett''s use of the language of computer programming and his version of the self as a kind of downloadable software package, a useful theoretical fiction yet one that is not real in any scientifically acceptable sense. She poses some objections to his naturalist approach to the problem of human selfhood.Turning to Ricoeur, she assesses his phenomenological-hermeneutic account of the self as a culturally mediated narrative unity. In comparing Ricoeur''s concept of self as an embodied character (as in a play or novel) woven from the many plots of a single life to Dennett''s neuroscientific model, McCarthy ultimately finds Ricoeur''s approach more comprehensive. The key advantage of Ricoeur''s interpretation is that it focuses, not on things, but on relationships between peculiarly human activities, such as developing long-term projects or making promises. She criticizes Dennett''s excessive objectivism as being too narrow to account for the richness and many-faceted aspects of human life.Finally she makes links with other contemporary scholars who are deploying theories of narrative selfhood in order to address questions of moral agency in a new light. This new approach to ethical issues, narrative ethics, is currently the subject of much debate in bioethical literature. Read more

ASIN B003Z0CCSU
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 978-1591029144
Edition 1st
Language English
File size 1.9 MB
Page Flip Not Enabled
Publisher Humanities Press
Word Wise Not Enabled
Print length 298 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Publication date August 25, 2010
Enhanced typesetting Not Enabled

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