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Self-Identity and Powerlessness
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In Self-Identity and Powerlessness, Alice Koubová proposes a conception of human existence that does not essentially depend on the definition of self-identity. The author shows that the philosophi...
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30 May 2013

In Self-Identity and Powerlessness, Alice Koubová proposes a conception of human existence that does not essentially depend on the definition of self-identity. The author shows that the philosophical stress on human identity fails to grasp essential aspects of human existence. By emphasizing the moments of Dasein’s powerlessness in Heidegger’s fundamental ontology, she develops — in her analysis of various philosophers, literary examples, and social psychology —an original phenomenology of alternation of existence and affair.
How necessary is identity for thinking? Are we capable of philosophical thought even when we have neither ourselves, nor the world under our full control? Is it possible to relax, become powerless, and yet think precisely? These questions are to be answered in this book.
How necessary is identity for thinking? Are we capable of philosophical thought even when we have neither ourselves, nor the world under our full control? Is it possible to relax, become powerless, and yet think precisely? These questions are to be answered in this book.
Price: $182.00
Pages: 244
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Contemporary Phenomenology
Publication Date:
30 May 2013
ISBN: 9789004254985
Format: Hardcover
Alice Koubová, PhD. (2005) Université Paris X, is a researcher at the Academy of Science in Prague. She has published monographs and articles on postphenomenology, performance philosophy, and phenopraxis, including Beyond the Principle of Identity (Filosofia Publishing, 2007). She coordinates the international program “Philosophy in Experiment” based in Prague.