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Context and reflexivity

the genealogy of self

Richard Zaner

pp. 153-174

The project I have set myself is mammoth and unmanageable. To attempt it anyway is foolish, and not only for that reason. As William Golding's Jocelin reflects, "to think how the mind touches all things with law, yet deceives itself as easily as a child," 1 so this project, seeking the inner logos of self's emergence, may well be too easily deceived. "Self," so readily characterizable in language by a substantivization of a reflexive (divested of the pronominative it qualifies), is, it may be, no substantive at all but an oddly fugitive reflexive presence, foredooming such inquisitive efforts as this to subtle but always rude failure. The vagaries of custom and habit seduce one to believe in the continuous subsistence of self, sometimes with marked passion; yet searches designed to ferret it out just as often end by entrapping themselves in their own belief and passion. It were wiser perhaps to leave these matters to those more accustomed to the regions of illusion and sly dexterity: the magical crafts.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-1769-5_11

Full citation:

Zaner, R. (1975)., Context and reflexivity: the genealogy of self, in T. Engelhardt & S. Spicker (eds.), Evaluation and explanation in the biomedical sciences, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 153-174.

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