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History
● 600 BCE: Athens, Greece
● The birth of Philosophy began: philia=love, sophia=wisdom, love for wisdom
● The philosophy is the study of acquiring knowledge through rational thinking and inquiries in
answering questions regarding the nature and existence of man.
● The Greeks in search of knowledge came up with answers that are both cognitive and scientific in
nature. (Price, 2000)
Human Nature
● A concept that denotes the fundamental dispositions and characteristics, including: ways of thinking,
feelings, and acting that humans are said to have naturally.
● What a man is made of, elements of man.
Socrates (470-399 BCE)
● Mentor of Plato, the first moral philosopher
● Considered to be the wisest of all men, the Oracle of Delphi
● Ancient Greek Thinker, who laid the early foundations for Western philosophical thought.
● He was born in Athens and fought as a foot soldier in the Peloponnesian War with Sparta, but in later
years became a devotee of philosophy and argument.
● At the age of 70, he was charged with heresy and corruption of local youth.
● He wanted to discover the essential nature of knowledge, justice, beauty, and goodness (Moore &
Bruder, 2002)
● He did not write anything, hence he is not a writer
● A lot of his thoughts were only known through Plato’s writing: The Dialogues
Socratic Method
● To understand the self, is to know thyself, to determine your identity, you need to know the
characteristics of yourself, a man has to look at himself. Through Socratic Method.
● “I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.” This is Socrate’s method for
discovering what is essential in the world and people.
● In this method, Socrates did not lecture; he insisted would ask questions and engage the
person in a discussion.
● He would begin by acting as if he did know anything and would get another person to clarify their
ideas and resolve logical inconsistencies (Price, 2000).
● Using this method, the questioner should be skilled at detecting misconceptions and at
revealing them by asking the right questions.
● The goal is to bring the person closer to the final understanding.
● Socrates believed that his mission in life was to seek the highest knowledge and convince
others who were willing to seek his knowledge with him.
● “The unexamined life is not worth living.” In life you have to truly know yourself in order for it to
be truly meaningful and worthwhile.
● Asking one’s self and others, what the perfect version of something is the ideal version,
might sound like a strange idea, perfect marriage or career? Or a system of government? Or
school?
● It can feel immature and naive, to bother much with such questions, they’re just daydreams.
We deal with what we’ve got.
● Throughout his work, he argues that focusing on the ideal version of something is one
of the most useful kinds of thought exercises we can generate, it’s by knowing how
something should be like that we can more clearly start to define what might be wrong
and what we need to do to make the world slightly better.
● Plato used a slightly strange but ultimately useful word: The Forms
● He asked what is the form of friendship or the form of parental love.
● When a Greek Stoneman was carving an ornament, they wouldn’t just make it up themselves.
They make use of a wooden template, or form, to check if they were getting it right. The form
itself was made by the master, but if the mason possessed the form, they could more reliably
do perfect work.
● Plato’s basic picture of what an ideal is, it’s the guide you need that shows you how to do
something well yourself. If you’ve got possession of the form, you can be guided towards a
true goal.
● A form, as Plato sees it, it is a blueprint, a set of instructions for making a very good
version of something. Hence why we all need a very well thought-through set of forms
to guide us in life.
● Philosophy can guide us to these forms.
● E.g., The form of friendship, a mental model of what a perfect friendship actually involves,
thus if you grasp this model if this idea is active in your mind, you will know how to be a good
friend.
● Having a form of education in mind is going to be very useful for the teacher, it will stop her
from being buffeted by events and day-to-day pressures, she’ll be able to keep in mind where
ideally she should be going.
● We’ve typically thought of ideals as phantasy projections that blindly ignore most of
what life is actually like, we think of them as the opposite of being realistic.
● Plato sees an ideal as a result of a deep understanding, and careful engagement with
reality.
● E.g., Someone setting up an airport would need, in the platonic scheme, to have in mind the
ideal air traffic control system, something optimally effective, efficient, and safe, this person
who would in Plato’s terms have grasped the form of air traffic control.
● We all need to have as many forms in mind as we possibly can, Plato is breaking the
habitualistic assumption, that searching for the ideal is at odds with getting things
done in the ruff and tumble of the real world and he’s pushing us to be more exacting
about where we are trying to head to.
● If an ideal seems utterly distant and hopeless, maybe the problem isn’t that it’s too idealistic,
but not idealistic enough, that is we have not quite yet discovered the form.
● We shouldn’t abandon our ideals, we should get more ambitious about them.
Plato’s Components of the Soul are in Dynamic Relationship with One Another
● The Reason is rational (it has reason and intellect: thinking soul), has a divine essence that
enables us to think deeply, make wise choices and achieved through understanding of eternal
truths; and is the motivation for goodness and truth.
■ When conflict occurs, it is the responsibility of the reason to sort things out or restore
the relationship of the elements. Mediator of the three, in control of the two
● The Spirited (composes of emotion, feelings and passion) is non-rational and is the will or
drive toward action
● The Appetites (basic biological needs) are irrational and lean towards the desire for
pleasures of the body
Plato believed people are intrinsically good. Sometimes, however, judgments are made in
ignorance and Plato equates ignorance with evil (Price, 2000).
1. Vegetative Soul - (soul of the plant, lowest level of the soul) it can grow and nourish itself,
they have internal principles of development and change, that’s what makes them able to
grow from a seed to a tree.
2. Sensitive Soul - (soul of an animal, for they have sensitive soul) it can experience sensations
and move locally,
● They have internal principles of development and change (vegetative soul), have a
power of nutrition and reproduction, capable of movement and sensation, hear, smell,
taste food, emotions.
3. Rational Soul - (highest level of soul) has the ability to receive forms of other things and to
compare them using the nous (intellect) and logos (reason). It’s all about thoughts and
reflection.
● They have internal principles of development and change (vegetative soul), have a
power of nutrition and reproduction, capable of movement and sensation, hear, smell,
taste food, emotions, locomotion, apolitical animal: capable of forming society, rational
abstraction.
● Descartes believed that reasoning could produce absolute truths, that is why he believed in Apriori,
which means that knowledge is independent of experience (Price, 2000).
Concept of Dualism
● Mind-Body Problem- The mind/soul was separated from the body
● The body is like a machine that is controlled by the will and aided by the mind
● “On the one hand, I have a clear and distinct idea of myself, in so far as I am a thinking, non-extended
thing; and on the other hand, I have a distinct idea of body, in so far this is simply an extended,
non-thinking thing. And accordingly, it is certain that I am really distinct from my body and exist
without it.” - René Descartes
● Body is an extended non-thinking element.
John Locke (1632-1704)
● Believed in contrast to Descartes, wherein, understanding requires the senses
● Interested in politics, Defender of the parliamentary system
● At 57 years old, he published a book which played a significant role in the era of Enlightenment
(Price, 2000)
● He is an empiricist
Locke’s View of Human Nature
● Knowledge results from ideas produced a posteriori or objects that were experienced
● The process involves Two Forms:
1. Sensation - wherein objects are experienced through senses
2. Reflection - by which the mind ‘looks’ at the objects that were experienced to discover
relationships that may exist between them
● Locke contended that ideas are not innate, but rather, the mind at birth is a “tabula rasa” (i.e blank
slate)
● According to Locke, since ideas are not innate, it then, therefore, must come from the senses.
● He argued that all knowledge is obtained through experience. He rejected concept of Rene's ideas
● That further means, that morals, religion, and political values must have been a product of man’s
experiences
Empiricism
● A belief that sense experience is the most reliable source of knowledge.
● It emphasizes the role of experience and evidence, especially sensory perception, in the formation of
ideas, and argues that the only knowledge humans can have is based on experience.
Sociology - is one of the disciplines in the social sciences which aims to discover the ways by which the
social surrounding/environment influences people’s thought, feelings, and behavior.
● As sociology is concerned with human society, social interaction and social groups. It serves then as
a tool to explain why people behave and do what they do.
● It clarifies certain questions that involve an individual’s character and personality as to how one
relates with other persons which is a by-product of the process called socialization.
Culture - consists of all the shared products of human groups. It compasses learned behavior, beliefs,
attitudes, values, and ideal characteristics of certain societies.
Society - is a group of mutually interdependent people who have organized in such a way as to share a
common culture a nd feeling of unity.
Therefore, society c onsists of people, and culture consists of the product that people create.
FAMILY - (people who are with us since birth) plays a major role in the formation of the self. They are the
significant others strongly influence his development (Schaefer, 2012)
A person’s capacity to see one’s self through others implies MEAD’S I AND ME
I SELF ME SELF
● When the person initiates, the self functions ● When a person takes the role of the other,
as a subject. The subjective element of the the self functions as an object. The objective
self is the I. element of the self is the Me.
● The I is basically the response to the Me, it
basically serves as the individual
identity/personal identity (Miller, 2015)
Imagine - It is noticed that Cooley used the word Imagine. This may mean that there is a possibility that
people develop self identities based on the wrong perception of how others see them. Wrong perceptions,
however, can still change based on positive social experiences.
SOCIAL-PSYCHOLOGY - focus on situations, socio-psychologists are interested with the impact of the social
environment and social group interactions on attitudes and behaviors.
SOCIAL: Family, Religion, Wealth and Society PSYCHOLOGY: Feelings, Thoughts, Actions, BeliefS
ERVING GOFFMAN
● A Canadian American sociologist known for his role in the development of Modern
American Sociology.
● He posited the Presentation of the Self in Everyday Life, wherein people early in their social
interactions learned to slant their presentation of themselves in order to create appearances and
satisfy particular people or altering how the person presents himself to others which he called
Impression Management.
● He sees similarities of real social interaction to a theatrical presentation. This is the reason for the
label, dramaturgical approach to his view.
○ People pleaser
The Self from the Perspective of Anthropology
ANTHROPOLOGY
● A field of the social sciences that focuses on the study of man. Not just one aspect of man, but the
totality of what it means to be human.
● The field looks into man’s physical/biological characteristics, social relationships, and the
influence of his culture from the dawn of civilization up to the present.
● A social science that studies the origins and social relationships of human beings. Everything in
Anthropology is Interconnected.
● As humans we are innately curious creatures that seek to find our origin point, evolution as a species
and feature patterns in our life. A big part of our human nature is also wanting to know how other
people are similar to and different to the community around us.
● Anthropology gives a solid picture of human origins.
ARCHAEOLOGY
● Refers to the study of earlier cultures and their way of life through retrieving, and examination of
material remains of previous human societies to understand the technical, social, political
organization (Jose & Ong, 2016).
● The archaeologist is a scientist who studies artifacts in order to discover how people lived their
lives As a result, archaeologists have discovered that human adapted to change in their environment
in order for them to survive
● They believed that homo sapiens did not become extinct because of their ability to think, use tools,
and learn from experience
● The most important aspect of human life is survival. Human behavior according to the School of
Functionalism, continues to adopt, in order to survive.
○ Functionalism in psychology is a school of thought, and functionalists (one’s who lead:
psychologists, sociologists) these groups of people distress the importance of empirical
rational thought over an experimental trial error philosophy. They are concerned more with
the capability of the mind than the process of the thought.
○ Physical anthropologists work closely with archeologists to investigate human remains.
BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
● Gives emphasis on the biological adaptations of man to his environment.
● Biological Anthropologists focus primarily on how the human body adapts to the different earth
environments. They look at the probable cause of diseases, mutation and death. They are interested
in explaining how biological characteristics of human beings affect how they lived their lives.
○ Some examine fossils and apply their observations in understanding human evolution. Others
compare physiological adaptations of living humans to their environments to understand the
root of behavior.
○ Morphology- a branch of biology that deals with forms of living organism.
● They study people in different places and discovered that while human beings vary in their
biological make up and behavior, there are a lot more similarities among them than there are
difference
● Biological characteristics of human beings shared may earn from them complete dominion over all
earth creatures and at the same time be the cause of their extinction.
○ Biology of skin color- our skin tells an epic tale of human intrepidness and adaptability
revealing its variance to be a function of biology.
○ Melanin - pigment that gives skin and hair its color, an ingredient from skin cells
(melanocytes). Has two basic forms: eumelanin (gives rise to a range of brown skin tones,
black brown,blond hair), pheomelanin (causes the reddish browns of freckles and red hair).
● Consider the biology of skin color, wherein how the varying skin tone of man was formed by an
evolutionary process driven by the sun.
LINGUISTIC ANTHROPOLOGY
● The branch of anthropology which focuses on the study of human speech and language.
● Human survival is primarily linked to their ability to communicate and an essential part of human
communication is language.
● Language identifies a group of people; words, sounds, symbols, writings and signs that are used are
reflections of a group’s culture.
● L. A formulates categories of social identity and group membership.
● Linguistic Anthropologists used language to discover a group’s manner of social interaction, to
create and share meanings to form ideas, concepts and to promote social change, and how language
changes over time.
○ They are concerned with how language influences culture. Why is one language preferred
over another? Why do different geographic regions have different language accents? What
types of values and ideologies are communicated through language? Does language vary
according to gender, beliefs and other criteria?
● Language is reflective of the time and mode of thinking of the people using it. As societies change
and technologies develop, language is the lifeline of indigenenous identities and transmission of
culture, so do the symbols and meaning people use through language as their way of
communicating.
CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
● Gives emphasis on the study of societies and human behavior, taking into consideration religion,
culture, myths, rituals, technology, gender roles, kinship, economic and political structure, music and
folklore.
● Culture group of people’s ways of life. Including their behavior, beliefs, values and symbols that they
accept, socially transmitted through communication and imitation from generation to generation.
● Cultural Anthropologists focus on knowing what makes one group’s manner of living particular to
that group and forms an essential part of the member’s personal and social identity.
CULTURAL RELATIVISM
The ability to understand a culture on its own terms and not to make judgments using the standards
of one’s own culture. No one culture is superior than another culture when compared to systems of
morality, law and politics.
● Any opinion with regard to ethics is subject to the perspective of each person within their
particular culture.
VALUES
● Considered to be the core of every culture. Values are unconscious, and can neither be
discussed nor be directly observed but can only be inferred from the way people act and react
to circumstances and situations.
E.g. respect for elders, hospitality