Subject (philosophy)

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In philosophy, a subject is a being which has subjective experiences or a relationship with another entity (or "object"). A subject is an observer and an object is a thing observed. This concept is especially important in Continental philosophy, where 'the Subject' is a central term in debates over human autonomy and the nature of the self.

Marx, Nietzsche and Freud are three 19th century philosophers who questioned the notion of a conscious subject, which is the foundation of the liberal theory of the social contract.

In critical theory and psychology, subjectivity is also the actions or discourses that produce individuals or 'I'; the 'I' is the subject -- the observer.

In contemporary philosophy, the issue of subjectivity has received attention as one of the major intractable problems in philosophy of mind (another intractable issue being the mind-body problem). In the essay What is it like to be a bat?, Thomas Nagel famously argued that explaining subjective experience -- the "what it is like" to be something -- is currently beyond the reach of scientific inquiry, because scientific understanding by definition requires an objective perspective, which, according to Nagel, is diametrically opposed to the subjective first-person point of view. These additional features of subjective experience are often referred to as qualia (see Frank Cameron Jackson and Mary's Dilemma).

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Nietzsche's critique of the subject

Nietzsche has criticized the groundworks of the subject, rejecting the notion of substance (Heidegger later showed how subject came from the Greek "substance"). Self-identity is assured by conscience, as John Locke showed, which is, according to Nietzsche, a hypostasis of the body and the multiple forces composing it Template:Ref. Nietzsche stated that the subject was a "grammatical fiction"; "there is no doer behind the doing". Later, Heidegger thought the Dasein as "Being-there", which must not be mistaken with a personal subject. These thinkers opened up the way for the deconstruction of the subject as a core-concept of metaphysics.

Social Construction of the Subject

Thinkers such as Althusser, Foucault or Bourdieu theorize the subject as a social construction. According to Althusser, the "subject" is an ideological construction (more exactly, constructed by the "Ideological State Apparatuses"). It is constituted through the process of interpellation; according to Foucault, it is the "effect" of power and "disciplines" (See Discipline and Punish: construction of the subject as student, soldier, "criminal", etc.).

The Psychoanalytic Subject

Jacques Lacan, inspired by Heidegger and Althusser, developed a psychoanalytic model of the subject, in which the "split subject" is constituted by a double bind - alienated from jouissance when he enters into the Imaginary during the mirror stage, and separated from the Other when he comes under the Name of the Father and enters into the Symbolic.

See also

Philosophers

Endnotes

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