Subjectivity is the central philosophical concept, which is related to consciousness, agency, personality, reality, and truth, which has been variously defined by the source. Three common definitions including subjectivity are qualities or conditions:
- Something into the subject , narrowly means someone with conscious experience, such as perspective, feelings, beliefs, and desires.
- Anything that becomes a subject, it means a privileged entity, which means that it acts on or exercises power over several other entities (an object ).
- Some information, ideas, situations, or physical objects are considered true only from the subject or subject perspective.
These definitions of subjectivity are sometimes combined in philosophy. This term is most often used as an explanation for what affects, informs, and biases people's judgments about truth or reality; it is a collection of perceptions, experiences, expectations, personal or cultural understanding, and a particular belief for a person.
Subjectivity differs from the philosophy of objectivity, which is described as a view of truth or reality free from the biases, interpretations, feelings, and fantasies of each individual.
Video Subjectivity
Philosophical concepts
The emergence of the notion of subjectivity has its philosophical roots in the thoughts of Descartes and Kant, and its articulation throughout the modern era has depended on the understanding of what individuals are. There are various interpretations of concepts such as self and soul, and the identity or self-consciousness that lies at the root of the notion of subjectivity.
Maps Subjectivity
Society
Subjectivity is an inherently social way that arises through untold interactions in society. As much as subjectivity is the process of individuation, it is the same as the process of socialization, the individual is never isolated in a complete environment, but endlessly engaging in interaction with the world around him. Culture is the totality of life of a certain subjectivity of society that continues to undergo transformation. The subjectivity of both is shaped by it and shaping it in turn, but also by other things such as economics, political institutions, communities, and the natural world.
Although the boundaries of society and their culture are unexplained and arbitrary, the inherent subjectivity of each is pleasant and can be recognized as different from the others. Subjectivity is part of the experience or organization of a particular reality, which includes how one views and interacts with humanity, objects, consciousness, and nature, so the distinction between different cultures brings about the alternative experiences of existence that shape life in different ways. The common effect on the individual from the separation between subjectivity is a culture shock, in which the subjectivity of another culture is considered alien and may be incomprehensible or even hostile.
Political subjectivity is an emerging concept in the social sciences and humanities. Political subjectivity is a reference to the profound depth of subjectivity in a system of interrelated power and meaning. "Politicality," Sadeq Rahimi writes in Meaning, Madness and Political Subtivityivity, is not an additional aspect of the subject, but fashion is the subject, that is, exactly what the subject is is . "
See also
- Dogma
- Intersubjectivity
- Phenomenology (philosophy)
- Phenomenology (psychology)
- Political subjectivity
- Methodology Q
- Subject (philosophy)
- Truth is Subjectivity , an existential interpretation of subjectivity by SÃÆ'øren Kierkegaard
References
Further reading
- Beiser, Frederick C. (2002). German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801 . Harvard University Press.
- Block, Ned; Flanagan, Owen J.; & amp; Gzeldere, Gven (Eds.) Nature of Consciousness: Philosophical Debate . Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-52210-6
- Bowie, Andrew (1990). Aesthetics and Subjectivity: From Kant to Nietzsche . Manchester: Manchester University Press.
- Dallmayr, Winfried Reinhard (1981). Twilight of subjectivity: Contribution to Post-Individualist Theory Politics . Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press.
- Ellis, C. & amp; Flaherty, M. (1992). Subjectivity Investigation: Research on Life Experience . Newbury Park, CA: Sage. ISBN 978-0-8039-4496-1
- Farrell, Frank B. (1994). Subjectivity, Realism, and Postmodernism: The Restoration of the World in Recent Philosophy . Cambridge - New York: Cambridge University Press.
- Johnson, Daniel (July 2003). "About Truth As Subjectivity In Unwritten Kierkegaard Posts." Quodlibet Journal . 5 (2-3).
- Lauer, Quentin (1958). Victory Subjectivity: An Introduction to Transcendental Phenomenology . Fordham University Press.
External links
Source of the article : Wikipedia