Repository | Book | Chapter

(2013) The self in question, Dordrecht, Springer.
The Introduction raised the question of whether use of "I" is essential to self-consciousness, citing various historical personages who self-consciously self-referred using their own name: Julius Caesar, Henry James, Charles de Gaulle, and Andy Hamilton, among others. Could there be a community of name-users whose linguistic convention generalises this rather egoistic use, in which each speaker uses only their own name to self-refer? Is there any reason other than convenience why the self-referring use of non-indexicals, such as proper names and definite descriptions, could not generally replace "I"? What is the connection between "I" and self-consciousness? These and related questions form the topic of Chapter 1.
Publication details
Full citation:
Hamilton, A. (2013). Self-consciousness and its linguistic expression, in The self in question, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 10-35.
This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.