
Being We
Phenomenological Contributions to Social Ontology
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 30 January 2025
- ISBN 9780192894489
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages240 pages
- Size 240x165x20 mm
- Weight 510 g
- Language English 785
Categories
Short description:
The we is an integral part of everyday life: We solve tasks, reach decisions, and share emotions together, just as we can share a collective identity, traditions and customs. What is the nature of this we? The book discusses this question by drawing on insights from not only philosophy, but also sociology, anthropology, and social psychology.
MoreLong description:
What does it take to constitute a we with others and how does feeling, thinking, and acting as part of a we, transform one's sense of self, one's relation to others, and the way one experiences the world? Is individual subjectivity something that necessarily requires a communal grounding or does a we-relationship always presuppose a plurality of pre-existing selves? What kind of understanding of and relation to others is required if a we is to emerge? Questions regarding the ontological, epistemological, and social character of we is not only of contemporary societal relevance, but are also questions that were intensively discussed by early phenomenological philosophers such as Husserl, Reinach, Stein, Scheler, Walther, Gurwitsch, and Schutz.
Drawing on and engaging with ideas and distinctions found in these historical resources, Being We combines historical scholarship and systematic theorizing. It breaks new ground by interweaving work on selfhood and first-personal experience, social cognition, and collective intentionality, offers a much-needed cross fertilization between philosophy and theoretical considerations in the social sciences (sociology, anthropology, and social psychology), and provides a novel account of the complex interrelation between we, you, and I.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Part I. We and I
We-experiences
An Individualist Bias
Basic Selfhood
Socially (un)constructed subjectivity
Husserlian Complexifications
Group Identification
The Question of Primacy
Part II. We and You
Empathy
Communication and Second-person Engagement
Shared Emotions
Part III. Varieties of We
Dyads and Triads
Communal Bonds