SOME HISTORICAL SOURCES OF THE APPARENT INTUITIVE TRUTH OF INDIVIDUALISM
Journal: Horizon. Studies in Phenomenology (Vol.4, No. 1)Publication Date: 2015-12-25
Authors : Fedor Stanzhevskiy;
Page : 38-69
Keywords : Subject; individual; causality; intentionality; ideas; practices; representation; Modernity; Calvinism.;
Abstract
The article is an attempt to retrace some sources of individualism, first of all in the philosophy of mind. Individualism here constitutes an endeavor to separate human mind from the world. The necessity of tracking the genesis of individualism is due to the fact that individualism appears to many as intuitively obvious. However, this apparent evidence results from our historical tradition or, rather, from some of its components. This individualistic component of the western tradition stems to a great extent from the Calvinist ideology. The idea of predestination in Calvin's theology was far from belonging to the pure order of thought: in fact it indelibly marked the whole of social practices in Calvinist and in particular puritan societies. This idea, according to Max Weber, Louis Dumont and Charles Taylor, largely contributed to the making of modern individualism. This range of individualist ideas and practices received much impetus in the philosophy of John Locke. On the one hand, Locke's philosophy as well as that of Descartes contains some potentiality different from the individualist one. On the other hand, Descartes and Locke lay the foundations of the representational view on mind, which severs the ties and bonds that exist between man and the world. The subject becomes an individual, enclosed in the micro-world of its own representations. This individualization in philosophy goes in pair with social individualization. The latter form of individualization is reflected in a literary form in the famous «Robinson Crusoe» by Defoe. In its turn, Leibniz's Monadology is a manifesto of philosophical individualism. On the whole, this individualist tendency of Modernity still continues to guide our understanding and selfunderstanding, often without our knowing it. If one wants to formulate a different, non-individualist metaphysics, one needs to seek inspiration in the non-individualist part of the tradition of Modernity.
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