UTS 3 - St. Augustine To Kant
UTS 3 - St. Augustine To Kant
UTS 3 - St. Augustine To Kant
“ The life of every man is the story of constant struggle and conflict
between 2 forces – that of good and evil”
Are children born inherently good or inherently
bad?
Self According to St Augustine
He adopted Plato’s view that the self is an immaterial (but rational) soul.
He asserted that these forms were concepts existing within the perfect and
eternal God where the soul belongs.
A French philosopher,
mathematician, and scientist.
Father of modern philosophy.
First thinker to emphasize the use
of reason to describe, predict,
understand natural phenomenon
based on natural phenomena and
empirical evidence.
The Self-according Rene Descartes
In other words, the mind is separate from the empirically studied,
physical attributes of the body.
Distinction bet. The soul and body according to
Rene Descartes
The Soul The body
2. It is known only to itself (only you know 2 It can be doubted; the public can
your own mental event and others cannot correct claims abut the body.
correct your mental states.)
• Descartes states that the self is a thinking entity distinct from the
body.
• Although the mind and the body are independent from each other
and serve their own function, man must use his own mind and
thinking abilities to investigate, analyze, experiment and develop
himself.
Activity: Complete the statement
• By group, complete the statement …..
• Example:
Activity
The Self According John Locke
“The identity of the same man consists…in nothing but a participation of the same
continued life, by constantly fleeting (passing) particles of matter in succession
vitally united to the same organized body.”
• Locke contended that ideas are not innate but rather the mind at
birth is a tabula rasa (blank slate) which means that knowledge is
derived from experience (include memories of the thinking thing).
• Nothing exist in the mind that was not first in the senses.
Animals and plants are identified by
participation in the same continued life, bodies
by their material composition.
• In the same manner, the self according to Hume is not just one
impression but a mixed and a loose cohesion of various personal
experiences. There is no constant impression that endures through
out your life.
David Hume: The Self is the Bundle Theory of
Mind
A Scottish philosopher, economist, historian during the age of
enlightenment.
He does not believe in the existence of self.
He stressed that your perception are only active as long as you are
conscious.
Once your perception is removed in the case of being asleep, you can
no longer sense yourself then you also cease to exist.
Its like a light bulb that may be switch on or off.
Nature Vs. Nurture
Nativist view / Nativism Empiricist view / Empiricism
• For Hume, man has no “clear and intelligible” idea of the self.
• No single impression of the self exist; rather, self is just the thing to
which all perceptions of a man ascribed.
• Even if there were impression of the self that may constitute identity,
it may vary and always change.
• A person can never observe oneself without some other perceptions.
• Thus, “self” is just a bundle or collection of different perceptions.
Immanuel Kant: Respect for Self
Central figure in modern philosophy
He contributed to
1. Metaphysics-Study of Existence, What’s out
there?
2. Epistemology-Study of Knowledge, How do I
know about it?
3. Ethics-Study of Action, What should I do?
Kant proposed that human mind creates the
structure of human experience.
Immanuel Kant: Respect for Self
• REASON is the final authority of morality. Morality is achieved only
when there is absence of war because of the result of enlightenment.
• You perceive the outside world because of your ideas and your
knowledge of your ideas. He insisted that you perceive the outside
world because there is already an idea residing within you.
Self according Immanuel Kant
1.Self is transcendental (independent of experience).
Means the self is related to a spiritual or nonphysical realm.
2. Outer Self
Includes our senses and physical world.
It gathers information from the external world through the senses, which the
inner self interprets and coherently expresses.
The common boundary between the external world and the inner self.
Kant argued that mind is not just a passive receiver of sense experience but
rather actively participates in knowing the object it experience.
2 Basic type of knowledge
• Posteriori – knowledge arises from and depends on sense experience.
• Priori – knowledge which arises from the operations of the mind and
is independent
As rational beings, we do not merely act based on instinct or conditioning,
rather we freely choose to act them.
“Do you agree with the statement of Kant that “we can be held
responsible only for those things we can control”.
• Thus, all men are persons gifted with the same basic rights and
should treat each other as equals.