Objectification and intolerence
Abstract
Based on philosophical phenomenology (M. Heidegger) and a positive science (psychoanalysis of D. W. Winnicott), this paper starts by formulating two problems of tolerance: the one being that of coming to terms with different senses of the real and different modes of talking about it, and the other that of reconciling our objectifying with our non-objectifying relationships to the world. After showing at some length that both problems have been generally neglected not only in the theological but also in the philosophical literature, the post-modern as well as the enlightened one, it will be shown that a language appropriate for describing the objectifiable reality can be intrusive and even destructive - and thus intolerant -, if used to talk about the non-objectifiable reality, and that objectifying attitudes can destroy the non-objetifying ways of relating to the world and to other persons, being, in this respect, a threat to the very essence of our humanity. Keywords: Objectification; Tolerance; Kant; Heidegger; Winnicott.Downloads
Published
2024-10-02
How to Cite
Loparic, Z. (2024). Objectification and intolerence. Human Nature - International Philosophy and Psychology Review, 9(1), 51–95. Retrieved from https://revistas.dwwe.com.br:443/index.php/NH/article/view/907
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