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Looking-Glass Self: An Examination of Self-Awareness

Contributor(s): Canfield, John V (Author)

ISBN: 9780275935863

Publisher: Praeger

Hardcover
$100.00
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Pub Date: November 20, 1990

Dewey: 126

LCCN: 90007143

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.63" H x 9.21" L x 6.14" W ( 1.20 lbs) 264 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

John Canfield here presents a penetrating study of the self and self-consciousness from the point of view of contemporary analytic philosophy. Taking as his starting point Wittgenstein's views on the nature of the self, Canfield explains Wittgenstein's approach to philosophy and his way of looking at language. He also explores significant non-Wittgensteinian philosophical literature including the widespread debate over criteria of personal identity and basic assumptions about the I of such expressions as I think. The second half of the book examines how we fix or ascertain certain beliefs about ourselves--a problem not previously discussed by analytic philosophers.

Canfield begins by examining traditional theories that take the self to be a fiction of some sort. He goes on to analyze our deep-seated existential belief in self--a belief that, he notes, can coexist with a theoretical denial of self's existence. A central chapter of the book attempts to delineate clearly Wittgenstein's view of the I as a grammatical fiction. In addressing the large literature on criteria of personal identity, Canfield argues that a central assumption of that work--the notion of judging by intuition in puzzle cases--is mistaken. Turning his attention to forms of self-consciousness, Canfield demonstrates that the I of gut-level belief is categorically heterogeneous and, in part, fictional. Written with a minimum of jargon, this book will interest Wittgensteinian scholars as well as philosophers, social scientists, and psychoanalysts involved in the study of the self.

Brief description:

JOHN V. CANFIELD is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. He edited the 15-volume set The Philosophy of Wittgenstein and is author of Wittgenstein, Language and World.

Review Quotes: "It's really an impressive thing. . . . It's a great pleasure to read and shows once again that good philosophy can be beautifully written."- Roderick Chisholm Professor of Philosophy Brown University

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