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Reflections on Our Individual and Collective Identities as Persons in the World

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Sociological and Philosophical Perspectives on Education in the Asia-Pacific Region

Part of the book series: Education in the Asia-Pacific Region: Issues, Concerns and Prospects ((EDAP,volume 29))

Abstract

The concepts of identity and identification have an interesting intellectual history, not least because they have been understood in quite different ways across different disciplines and traditions. In this chapter, I argue that a widespread failure among scholars to appreciate what is actually a familiar ambiguity in these concepts has resulted in considerable confusion when it comes to understanding and responding to so-called problems of identity. While we may construe our own identities as providing an answer to the core question “Who am I?”, there is a difference between numerical or quantitative identity and qualitative identity (similarity) which appears to have gone unnoticed in the social sciences literature. Analytic philosophy has long been interested in the problem of personal identity, typically viewed in terms of how it is possible for one and the same object (in this case a person) to retain its numerical identity, given that this object will inevitably undergo many qualitative changes over time. But postmodernist thinkers, including philosophers and social scientists, are more interested in the complementary question of what it is that connects or unites numerically distinct persons so that they come to identify not merely with one another but also with some larger entity – nation, culture, ethnicity, sexuality, religion, tribe, gang, tradition – to which they belong. These entities may become what I term “supra-persons”: collectives or associations of qualitatively similar individuals that lay claim to providing, not merely the answer to the “Who am I?” question but an ethical framework for regulating the behavior of their members. Thus, a nation, culture, religion, or gang is regarded as morally superior to those who belong or subscribe to it (who, in turn, regard themselves as morally superior to those who belong to other nations, cultures, religions, or gangs). There are several serious mistakes here, including the doomed attempt to find our basic identities within one or more such supra-persons and the moral relativism which results. As an alternative, I track our literal identities to the natural kind of entity that we are and ground both our ethical and our epistemological status in that more fundamental concept which groups all of us: that of being a person. I offer several illustrations of how this concept may help to shed light on contemporary problems of identity and identification, including a critical perspective on the contemporary meaning and moral significance of Confucianism. And I appeal to the relational nature of personhood to defend the central place of community and dialogue in formal education.

Some of the ideas in this Chapter are included in my book Identity and Personhood: Confusions and Clarifications across Disciplines (Splitter 2015).

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Notes

  1. 1.

    The claim made in (i) is consistent with the idea that some persons – e.g., higher-order mammals – are not human beings; indeed, some – advanced robots or computers – may not even be living creatures. Still, they must be members of some kind which specifies their identity conditions .

  2. 2.

    I have argued elsewhere that there are no purely psychological or mental kinds because the actual identification of individuals requires something like a spatiotemporal framework to provide the deictic or referential component that allows us to “pin down” a particular object of a given kind (Splitter 2011). In short, I support the view that if the appropriate material body is abstracted from the concept of person, then not enough remains to justify referring to persons as objects with their own identities.

  3. 3.

    Carruthers 2011, 388. For “rational agent” read “person”

  4. 4.

    At the end of the second edition of After Virtue, MacIntyre writes: “What matters at this stage is the construction of local forms of community within which civility and the intellectual and moral life can be sustained through the new dark ages which are already upon us” (1984, 263, emphasis added). If I am not to see the contingent facts of my existence as overpowering and untouchable, I must engage with others, not merely to find out where they are “from,” so to speak, but to make it possible for me (and you) to move forward, in constructing, together, a sense of the good life by way of inquiry.

  5. 5.

    Sen (2006, 117) is rightly critical of such an interpretation of “pluralism.”

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Splitter, L. (2016). Reflections on Our Individual and Collective Identities as Persons in the World. In: Lam, CM., PARK, J. (eds) Sociological and Philosophical Perspectives on Education in the Asia-Pacific Region. Education in the Asia-Pacific Region: Issues, Concerns and Prospects, vol 29. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-287-940-0_7

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