THE BOUNDARIES OF THE SELF AND THE LIMITS OF THE WORLD IN ARISTOTLE: A DIFFERENT KIND OF DECONSTRUCTION OF THE EGO Cover Image

THE BOUNDARIES OF THE SELF AND THE LIMITS OF THE WORLD IN ARISTOTLE: A DIFFERENT KIND OF DECONSTRUCTION OF THE EGO
THE BOUNDARIES OF THE SELF AND THE LIMITS OF THE WORLD IN ARISTOTLE: A DIFFERENT KIND OF DECONSTRUCTION OF THE EGO

Author(s): Attila Kovács
Subject(s): Philosophy, History of Philosophy, Philosophical Traditions, Ancient Philosphy, Phenomenology
Published by: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai
Keywords: Aristotle; movement; perception; touch; carnality; communication; neuroscience; Husserl; Heidegger;

Summary/Abstract: Phenomenological theories have a long history in undermining the “traditional” opposition between mind and body. According to them, the material, viz. the corporal can serve as a place for the processes of meaning-formation, i.e., as a condition of possibility for any set of relationships forming a body of meaning. In this paper, this manifests itself through the fact that the basic concepts related to corporeality, e.g., “perception”, “movement” etc., are the conditions of possibility for any construction of meaning and consciousness process, as also shown by contemporary neuroscience and communication theory in the case of intelligence and communication. However, this was already known to Aristotle, long before the advent of modern neuroscience, but the stakes were even higher for him: the issue of corporeality is itself problematic in terms of determining its boundaries, as the limits of the Self (viz. my body) merge with those of the world. The situation is similar to the “passive and active synthesis” of Husserl and also to Heidegger’s “twofold openness” of the Dasein, conflating the boundaries of the Self and the limits of the world for our human being-there, or consciousness.

  • Issue Year: 64/2019
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 197-207
  • Page Count: 11
  • Language: English