ARTICLE: “Between Minimal Self and Narrative Self: A Husserlian Analysis of Person” Jaakko Belt
“Between Minimal Self and Narrative Self: A Husserlian Analysis of Person”
Jaakko Belt
Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology
Volume 50, 2019 – Issue 4
Pages 305-323
13 Feb 2019
FULL TEXT:
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00071773.2019.1577067
ABSTRACT
The distinction between minimal self and narrative self has gained ground in recent discussions of selfhood. In this article, this distinction is reassessed by analysing Zahavi and Gallagher’s account of selfhood and supplementing it with Husserl’s concept of person. I argue that Zahavi and Gallagher offer two compatible and complementary notions of self. Nevertheless, the relationship between minimal self and narrative self requires further clarification. Especially the embeddedness of self, the interplay between passivity and activity, and the problems of uniqueness and persistence are better understood with Husserl’s analysis of person and its central concepts of position-taking, habitualities, and overall style. The embeddedness of self is elucidated by outlining how person is related to its environment, to other people, and to its past. This relational notion of self is both passively constituted and actively shaped: person mediates between minimal self characterized by perspectival ownership and narrative self based on authorship.
KEYWORDS: Self, selfhood, minimal self, narrative self, person, Husserl