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The Self

Part of the The Aquinas Lecture in Philosophy series
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Kenny's book covers the philosophical concept of the self.

He concentrates here on two of the roots of "self" - the epistemological root and the psychological root. Saying: "The myth of the self takes different forms in accordance with the root from which it takes its growth."In his introduction Kenny notes:"It is not poets and dramatists, but philosophers who are most given to talking about the self.

The Oxford English Dictionary lists a special philosophical sense of the word ""self"" which it defines as follows:That which in a person is really and intrinsically he (in contradistinction to what is adventitious); the ego (often identified with the soul or mind as opposed to the body); a permanent subject of successive and varying states of consciousness. It is the purpose of this lecture to claim that the self of the philosophers is a mythical entity, and so likewise is the self of the poets and dramatists to the extent to which it is modelled on the philosophers' myth."

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£16.95
Product Details
Marquette University Press
0874621550 / 9780874621556
Paperback / softback
126
30/03/1988
United States
34 pages
152 x 229 mm
Professional & Vocational Learn More