intersubjectivity Flashcards
It refers to shared meanings constructed by people in their interactions with each other.
is the philosophical concept of the interaction between the “self” and the “other”.
It is the mutual recognition of each other as persons.
It refers to the shared awareness, and understanding among persons. It is made possible by the awareness of the self and the other.
Intersubjectivity
believes that intersubjectivity is more than just shared understanding, but it is the capability to put oneself in the place where the other is.
Edmund Husserl
This happens when people put themselves in the shoes of others.
the ability to share emotions. This emotion is driven by a person’s awareness that the other is a person thoughts and feelings
Empathy
“feeling with”
Sympathy
“feeling in”
empathy
An advocate of individualism.
As a proponent of the doctrine of individualism, he resolved to doubt absolutely everything that could possibly be doubted--in the hope of thereby finding something that was beyond doubt. (“Doubt everything that can be doubted”)
According to him there is one thing that
cannot be doubted, and that is thinking
Rene Descartes
actions where an individual presents himself or herself in a certain way when dealing with others. Persons take on “roles” or act out characters when dealing with certain people or when in certain situations.
There may be instances when people behave a certain way in
order to intentionally deceive or manipulate other people.
“Seeming”-
, a Jewish philosopher had a great
interest in the study of relating ourselves to others.
He said that “I” or yourself, can only be realized
through recognition of “others.”
The “I” cannot be aware of its uniqueness and
existence without encountering the “other.”
Martin Buber
relationship is the second type of relationship.
There are people that treat the other people into the status of
an object—an It.
“I-It” relationship
It is in this kind of human relations that genuine sharing of one another takes place.
It is in this type of relationship that the other is treated as distinctly other, the I treats the person as a Thou (You)—-as another person who is different from the I; one has a different set of interests, visions, beliefs, values, and characteristics.
The center of this relationship is a genuine form of conversation: a
dialogue.
“I-Thou” relationship
is a form of interpersonal communication which occurs when people recognize that they are part of a greater whole and can relate with others within the whole.
In some cases, non-verbal dialogical relations are not only the more appropriate means of conversation, but considered as a more profound form of conversation
Authentic Dialogue