Daniel
Possibility
Is the concept of personhood dependent on the interaction of two or more human beings? what about the concept of mind? does the mind require other minds to exist? Would a person who's never seen another mind or another self categorize his thoughts as part of a self? It seems to me that I call myself myself because I observe in other people a unique behaviour that I distinguish from everything else, and from such observation I infer that like them I must have a unique behaviour. Is the mind a social construct, or is it truly a characteristic of the individual, independent of social interaction? — Daniel
Daniel
This ‘self’ is not consolidated as a concept until it is successfully communicated to another - until someone deliberately manifests an arbitrary distinction that cannot be interpreted as a socially constructed interaction. — Possibility
Possibility
So, the ability to produce a self (to come up with a sense of self) is intrinsic to the individual, but that the individual produces a self is dependent on his social interactions. Would you agree with that statement? is it clear what I mean? — Daniel
Could you give an example of one of such "arbitrary distinctions"? — Daniel
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